THISDAY

PETROLEUM INDUSTRY ACT AND PARALYSIS OF PERCEPTION

- t ,FOF 0CJF[V "CVKB Read the full article online - www. thisdayliv­e.com

FNationalo­r many years, the Petroleum Industry Bill became in the Assembly the battle line across which stood familiar ethnic warriors cheered on by their people who saw in the bill a historic opportunit­y to look out for their own interests and nothing more.

There was always something to hold back the bill from hurtling over the line of passage, and always something to keep it from complete rejection. There was always the startling lack of clarity about key areas of the bill and the sweltering controvers­y about whether it was ultimately in the best interest of Nigerians, especially the long suffering people of the Niger Delta, or a particular section of the country which seems to have perfected the art of reaping from where it did not sow.

Before the advent of law which is recognized as a social contract, and instrument of social engineerin­g, to make the affairs of the society smoother, life in the words of Hobbes was nasty, brutish and short. Law came as a great equalizer, a soothing balm for festering wounds. Law came as the great tiebreaker in the various conflicts which necessaril­y assail human existence.

But it has never been enough that legislatio­ns are passed in any society. What has been of even more critical importance is that those laws are obeyed from the highest rungs of a society to its lowest rungs. It Informs the entire idea of the rule of law and its prescripti­on that the law must be supreme at all times and extract supreme subservien­ce from everyone in the society.

Nigeria`s experience with the law has been bitterswee­t. The country gained independen­ce in 1960 but erupted into Civil War seven years later. The military, largely to blame for the country`s teething problems would make hugely harmful intrusions into the governance of the country until 1999 when Nigeria returned to democracy. Since then, the rule of law in the country has yet to take a sound footing.

The long-suffering people of the Niger Delta were to discover that all that glitters is not gold soon after oil was discovered in their land. In intervenin­g years, ruthless oil exploratio­n which has calamitous­ly abandoned the golden goose that lays the golden eggs has left the region on the brink of extinction.

Its waters are polluted. Life has been sucked out of its soil. Even the air its people breath is laden with lethal pollutants. The Niger Delta equation in Nigeria`s oil politics has always been a question of justice.

Thus, the Petroleum Industry Bill which was to overhaul the oil and gas sector was stymied for a decade over concerns it would deal an unfair hand to the people of the Niger Delta. Now that it has finally got over the line with the assent of President Muhammadu Buhari, the concerns are about to flare into a conflagrat­ion of chaos.

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