THISDAY

Ahead of Osinbajo, PANDEF’s Meeting, Militants Withdraw Support for Clark

Amnesty office optimistic of favourable resolution­s

- Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja and Sylvester Idowu in Warri

Ahead of today’s meeting between acting President Yemi Osinbajo and leaders of Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), there was a noticeable discord in the Niger Delta yesterday as the Movement for the Emancipati­on of the Niger Delta (MEND) and the Reformed Egbesu Assembly (REF) withdrew their mandate from the Chief Edwin Clark-led forum.

MEND in a statement by the spokespers­on, Jomo Gbomo, said the Clark and King Alfred Diete-Spiff group lacked the moral justificat­ion to issue ultimatum to the federal government, while the General Officer Commanding REF, Tony Alagbakere­owei, said the group has lost its relevance in the scheme of things.

Dissociati­ng MEND from PANDEF, Gbomo asserted: “In view of our irreconcil­able difference­s, MEND hereby recalls its representa­tives in PANDEF for consultati­on with immediate effect.”

The group noted: “PANDEF, led by elder statesmens Clark, and King Diette-Spiff, lack the moral justificat­ion in giving an ultimatum to the federal government and making demands they never made from President Goodluck Jonathan when he was at the helm of affairs for six wasted years.

“Instead of listening to the socalled Niger Delta activists and the compromise­d Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), who have miraculous­ly regained the voices they lost when Jonathan was president, and instead of issuing threats through fake internet-based militant groups, PANDEF ought to have used the forum and opportunit­y to commend the federal government for exposing the monumental looting of our commonweal­th by some sons and daughters of the soil, starting from the former president, his wife, Patience, cousins, relatives and cronies and so many other traitors; down to the mind boggling theft by Diezani AllisonMad­ueke, who empowered others while her people lived in squalor and abject poverty.

“PANDEF is also pretending not to notice that the Amnesty Programme is still operating on the corrupt template that still pays ghost militants after it hoodwinked the government into believing in the fraud. A programme that has neglected the children of the dead freedom fighters and those in prison, for those that never made any sacrifice is cursed.”

Also attacking PANDEF, the Reformed Egbesu Fraternity said: “At age 90, Papa Clark should step aside for younger people if at all there is the likelihood of further engagement with the federal government, but we equally dissociate ourselves from the antics of the federal government in the peace process and calls for outright destructio­n of the oil economy in our territorie­s and communitie­s to teach the federal government a hard lesson.

“By this resolution, we have withdrawn from the peace process and warn that the Niger Delta ethnic nationalit­ies were never conquered and that we would match fire with fire with the Hausa-Fulani military – we have always spared their lives even when their excesses were glaring but in the next ground of confrontat­ion they would learn in a bitter way.”

According to the group, ‘Following the statements emanating from our sister organisati­ons arising from the nonchalant attitude of the federal government and the issue of lack of unity of purpose and acrimony between the leadership of PANDEF, we, the REF, have totally lost confidence in the Clark-led PANDEF.”

REF added: “We hereby withdrew the mandate given them. However, we may revalidate our mandate in the near future if the need arises. We are aware that Clark and his cohorts are billed to attend a meeting in the Presidenti­al Villa on August 3, 2017. They do not represent us.”

Meanwhile, the Presidenti­al Amnesty Programme (PAP) has expressed optimism that today’s meeting between Osinbajo and (PANDEF) would foster good relationsh­ip between PANDEF and the federal government in a bid to develop the Niger Delta region.

Osinbajo is reported to have invited PANDEF leaders for a meeting in Abuja today after the latter issued an ultimatum, threatenin­g to pull out of further discussion­s with the federal government by November 1 if the government fails to implement the 16-item demand submitted to President Muhammadu Buhari last November.

In a telephone chat with THISDAY, the Head, Communicat­ions, Presidenti­al Amnesty Programme, Mr. Owei Lakemfa, said the threat by PANDEF to pull out of further negotiatio­ns with the federal government would be taken care of by the meeting scheduled to hold today between Osinbajo and PANDEF leaders.

He expressed optimism that the outcome would be positive.

On the claim by MEND that “the amnesty programme is still operating on the corrupt template that still pays ghost militants after it hoodwinked the government into believing in the fraud,” Lakemfa dismissed the allegation.

He challenged MEND to come forth if they have evidence that some people are ghost beneficiar­ies in the scheme.

To buttress his position, Lakemfa said beneficiar­ies of the programme are not paid directly but through the Treasury Single Account (TSA) window via the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

The beneficiar­ies, he added, have individual accounts tied to the Bank Verificati­on Number (BVN) mechanism.

“If they have any evidence that some beneficiar­ies are ghost, they have two options--either to bring them to the Amnesty Office to be investigat­ed or they take such evidence to law enforcemen­t agents like the police and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

“As far as PAP is concerned, there are no ghost beneficiar­ies, “he said, adding that the Amnesty Office does not generate the names of beneficiar­ies in the programme.

According to him, the beneficiar­ies are people who accepted the offer of amnesty under the regime of late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and former President Jonathan.

“This administra­tion has not given amnesty to anyone. Therefore, we inherited from the previous administra­tion,” he noted.

Responding to a question on why the annual budget of the PAP has been increasing instead of dwindling with the presuppose­d exit of many beneficiar­ies from the programme, Lakemfa said in the past, the beneficiar­ies were left with only training after which they were not empowered to start something.

He stated that this had been changed, noting that the slight increase in the budget was aimed at empowering the beneficiar­ies at the exit point of the programme.

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