THISDAY

Niger Delta: Osinbajo and the Unresolved Etche Question

Amid a new attempt by the federal government to find a lasting solution to the Niger Delta crisis through engagement­s with the oil producing communitie­s, the umbrella sociocultu­ral organisati­on of Etche people in Rivers State, Ogbakor Etche, moves to ratc

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When on February 13 the acting president, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, visited Rivers State as part of his tour of the Niger Delta, the apex sociocultu­ral associatio­n of the Etche people, Ogbakor Etche, saw an opportunit­y to bring the people’s marginalis­ation and developmen­t dilemma to the attention of the federal government. They wanted the country to hear the story of the area first-hand from the people. For a stunningly long time, Etche has been one of the most underdevel­oped areas of Rivers State. It is also among the least remembered in the Niger Delta developmen­t equation, despite being one of the most productive parts of the region.

Ironically, Etche people were the first to announce the plight of the Niger Delta, their ruthless exploitati­on, ecological catastroph­e, and horrible developmen­t deficit, to the world. And they paid dearly for daring to take up the gauntlet.

Umuechem Massacre

In 1990, just before the agitation by the Niger Delta peoples for a fairer share of the region’s oil resources got up steam, Etche suffered one of the cruellest acts of killing and destructio­n by an alliance of a rentier state and internatio­nal capital the world had ever known. More than 50 residents of Umuechem were killed between October 30 and November 1, 1990 by men of the Nigeria Police Mobile Force, who also injured 20 persons and destroyed nearly 500 houses. The natives were being punished for daring to stand up against the exploitati­ve and destructiv­e activities of Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company of Nigeria in the community and demand socio-economic amenities.

Those killed by the police using gun and grenade fire included a Second Class Chief and Paramount Ruler of Igboh Agwuruasa clan, His Highness, Eze A. A. Ordu, and his three children. A police corporal also died in the incident.

It was the first of such incidents of destructio­n by the Nigerian state in the Niger Delta.

The Rivers State government set a judicial commission of inquiry into the Umuechem killings, headed by Justice Opubo Inko-Tariah (rtd). But that effort almost ended up rubbing salt in the people’s wound. The people always knew their disadvanta­ged place under Nigeria’s pseudo-federal system without anyone having to rub it in. But the judicial inquest appeared to do just that.

Though, the government white paper on the commission’s report recommende­d compensato­ry payments to victims of the police brutality and the community, it made the people of Umuechem and Etche, generally, feel even worse, when it stated, “The community should be educated to know and appreciate that whatever amenities the company may provide are purely on the basis of good public relations and charity which cannot be forced out or compelled.”

The commission also recommende­d that such “Enlightenm­ent campaign should be launched not only at Umuechem, but also at all oil producing areas, and in fact, in the whole state, to avoid misgivings that many people nurse against the oil exploratio­n companies.”

It was the Umuechem killings that ultimately gave the Niger Delta struggle its momentum. But the Umuechem issue has remained unresolved 27 year after. Many aspects of the compensato­ry package recommende­d in the report of the judicial inquiry, even though low and contemptib­le, have yet to be fully implemente­d. And the issues have continued to be compounded by mounting underdevel­opment.

Fresh Hope

So when Osinbajo came to Rivers State on February 13, Ogbakor Etche seized the opportunit­y to ramp up demand for action on Umuechem and the wider developmen­t issues among the Etche ethnic nationalit­y. The group sought to present an address during the town hall meeting involving the vice president and the government and people of the state at Government House, Port Harcourt, but it was not allowed.

Determined to make its case, Ogbakor Etche followed up the February 13 effort with another attempt to meet the vice president the next day. It paid off. Ogbakor Etche formally presented its address and souvenir to the vice president on February 14 at Aztec Arcum Event Centre, Ken Saro-Wiwa Road, Port Harcourt. It was at a forum for members of Osin- bajo’s All Progressiv­es Congress in the state and other Niger Delta stakeholde­rs, who could not make their presentati­ons at Government House. The associatio­n raised the fundamenta­l concerns of the Etche people in the address.

Besides the unresolved Umuechem issue, Etche people are concerned about the lingering boundary dispute between Umuakali community in Etche and Owaza in Okwa West Local Government Area of Abia State, which has continued to deny the people revenue accruing from oil production in the area. They are worried by the lack of infrastruc­tural facilities in the area. And they are bothered by the lack of recognitio­n for their sons and daughters in appointmen­ts into federal parastatal­s, especially the oil-related ones. This is despite the crucial economic contributi­ons of Etche to Rivers State and Nigeria.

Request

Ogbakor Etche, therefore, demands the constructi­on of a gas turbine in Etche to boost power supply to the area and enhance economic activities, considerin­g the vast oil and gas resources in the area. It wants the federal government to establish agro-based industries in Etche.

On Umuechem, the group demands the payment of full reparation to the community, “re-planning of the entire community, and a realistic upward review to the tune of N20 billion for compensati­on arising from the Umuechem massacre.”

Ogbakor Etche also wants the building of a federal medical centre in Umuechem to boost health care for the people as part of the remediatio­n measures following the physical, environmen­tal, and psychologi­cal onslaught on the community. It demands the appointmen­t of Etche indigenes into the boards of federal parastatal­s, particular­ly the oil-based ones, such as the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n and the Niger Delta Developmen­t Commission.

The group wants a proper demarcatio­n of the boundary between the oil producing communitie­s of Umuakali in Rivers State and Owaza in Abia State, to avoid communal disputes and grant the people peaceful access to their oil resources. It wants the establishm­ent of a federal university of agricultur­e in Etche and payment of N100 billion compensati­on to Etche people for the hazardous effects of 59 years of gas flaring and other oil related activities.

It demands that the amnesty programme by the federal government should “be revalidate­d and made more embracing,” while the Petroleum Industry Bill before the National Assembly should be accorded “the importance that it deserves” by being passed and accented to promptly.

Ogbakor Etche is hoping that Osinbajo, who is leading the federal government’s new peace initiative in the Niger Delta, would drive a new era of attention to Etche, a vast marginalis­ed, yet most productive, part of Rivers State.

Geopolitic­s

The Etche ethnic nationalit­y is made up of two local government areas, namely Etche and Omuma, with headquarte­rs in Okehi and Eberi, respective­ly. It has six clans, one federal constituen­cy, three House of Assembly seats, and a population of 3.5 million.

Etche is a major food basket in Nigeria, producing more than a third of the staple food of garri consumed in the South-south and South-east. With a largely rural farming population, it is a major producer of cassava, plantain, yam, palm oil, and rubber, as well as fruits, such as orange, guava, grape, and pineapple.

A massive area of land in Etche has been acquired by the Rivers State government for oil palm production, with plantation­s at Ozuzu, Isu, Ogida, and Egbu. Another 5, 000 hectares has been acquired by the state for rubber plantation­s at Odagwa, Abara, and Umuoye. Though, the rubber processing plant at Umuanyagu/Okomoko has remained dilapidate­d for over nine years.

Oil was discovered in commercial quantity at Umuechem in 1958, making it the first place for such discovery in Rivers State, and the second in Nigeria after Oloibiri in Bayelsa State.

It is in Etche that the world-famous and much sought-after Bonny Light crude is produced.

Besides Umuechem, oil is produced in the following Etche communitie­s, Abara, Akpoku, Osu, Orwu, Egwi, Okoroagu, Umuebulu, Ikwerrengw­o, Chokota, Imeh, Odagwa, Umuokwaj, Edegelem, Akwuobor, Mba, Umuakali, Amarji, and Umuolilo. With about 250 oil wells, the communitie­s fall under the following oil fields, Obigbo North, Agbada II, Umuechem/ Otamiri, Nkali, Imo River I, and Imo River II.

Other oil facilities include flow stations at Obigbo North, Agbada II, Umuechem, and Imo River II; natural gas plant, and associated gas gathering plant. Etche is said to be the third largest oil producing area of Rivers State.

Neglect

But nearly six decades of oil production has had little or no effect on the social, economic and political developmen­t of the people. It has, in fact, retarded their developmen­t through pollution of farmlands and instigatio­n of destructiv­e communal conflicts. (See concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com)

 ??  ?? Nwodim...President General of Ogbakor Etche
Nwodim...President General of Ogbakor Etche
 ??  ?? Opurum...Paramount Ruler of Etche Kingdom
Opurum...Paramount Ruler of Etche Kingdom

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