THISDAY

FG Placates, Vets Militant Groups in Niger Delta for Amnesty

- Emmanuel Addeh in Yenagoa

In an attempt to reduce tension, violent protest, kidnapping and attack on oil facilities in the Niger Delta region, the Federal Government has proposed a new vision to signpost a new era to oil producing communitie­s in the region.

The Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo stated this Thursday at a town hall meeting held with elders and people of Akwa Ibom State in continuati­on of his tour of states in the Niger Delta region.

“I am here as the emissary of President Mohammadu Buhari who after the visit of Pan Niger Delta Forum in November 2016 decided that we must undertake visit to engage with the leadership and people of oil producing communitie­s of the region to hear them and understand their problems and concern”, he said.

He said the tour was to offer communitie­s in the Niger Delta and all oil producing communitie­s a new vision and a new compact in the great source of wealth of the nation.

In this direction, the Acting President The Federal Government has begun discreet verificati­on of militant groups in the Niger Delta that recently accepted a temporary ceasefire after series of attacks on the country’s oil and gas infrastruc­ture in the region.

A string of meetings spearheade­d by the office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) and the Presidenti­al Amnesty Office (PAO) have already taken place to put finishing touches to the exercise which THISDAY gathered might be concluded in another round of talks scheduled for later this month.

While most of the groups currently going through screening in batches operate mainly from Delta, Bayelsa and Rivers, the hotbed of violent agitations in the oil-rich region, a source close to the talks stated yesterday that a handful also came in from Ondo, Cross River and Akwa Ibom, less affected by militancy.

The source noted that the groups were optimistic about the softening stance of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s government to the Niger Delta problem and were, therefore prepared to cooperate to ensure peace in the Delta.

One of the groups, the Iduwini Volunteer Force, (IVF) operating mainly around the Bayelsa, Delta axes, a source who spoke in confidence said it submitted a list of 320 fighters, just like other militant organisati­ons, which are currently being screened in batches by two directors from the NSA's office and that of the Presidenti­al Amnesty body.

The decision to submit themselves for vetting, it was learnt, arose from the renewed urgency the government seems to be giving the Niger Delta and some of the demands made by the leaders and elders of the area, the source said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria