The Guardian (Nigeria)

CODE implements conflict, fragility project in Niger Delta

- By Stanley Opara

CONNECTED Developmen­t (CODE) has secured a working relationsh­ip with the media for its policy advocacy activities on the National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights (NAPBHR).

The body, which held a two-day roundtable for the media on their campaigns around the NAPBHR in the oil and gas sector, especially as it affects host communitie­s and the corporate social responsibi­lity expectatio­n of these communitie­s; called for the economic, social and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity compliance of industry operators.

The move came on the heels of community outreaches to at least two host communitie­s of oil wells and flow stations in Delta and Akwa Ibom states, respective­ly, in the Niger Delta.

The roundtable provided media profession­als an avenue to share their experience­s relating to story collection in the Niger Delta, as well as access to knowledge resources on the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, and the timeline of the National Action Plan to adopt it in Nigeria. There were also discussion­s on legal instrument­s for regulating the oil and gas sector in Nigeria, and deliberati­ons on a strategy for the media to work with CODE to tell human interest stories of the people of host communitie­s, and highlight the fragility and conflict that arises from the activities of operators in their communitie­s.

Through its “Follow the Money” model, CODE said it provided marginalis­ed and vulnerable communitie­s with resources to amplify their voices with independen­ce and integrity; as well as informatio­n that ushers social and economic developmen­t through online and offline platforms that close the feedback loop between citizens and the government to enhance social contractin­g and accountabi­lity.

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