The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘Why Ogoni must be paid N4 trillion environmen­tal damage compensati­on’

- From Kelvin Ebiri, Port Harcourt

THE Ogoni Liberation Initiative (OLI) has vowed to legally press for compensati­on of N4 trillion environmen­tal damage for the over 60 years of oil exploratio­n in the area The group recalled that in 1992, Ogoni leaders demanded payment from the Federal Government to the tune of $6 billion in royalty from previous oil production covering 1958 to 1993 when the Shell Petroleum Developmen­t Company (SPDC) allegedly stopped production in the community but reportedly not paid.

OLI’S convener, Rev. Douglas Fabeke, told journalist­s yesterday in Bori, Khana Local Council of Rivers State that the money must be paid to Ogoni people because the group’s environmen­tal evaluation “showed the total breakdown of destructio­n of the environmen­t from 1958 till 2019 which has totally destroyed the economic value of the people, rendering the entire Ogoniland unproducti­ve and throwing the people into a stage of continuous poverty and economic slavery.”

“In this respect, the organisati­on has legally filed the evaluation report and is demanding for the pursue of the environmen­tal damage in order to compensate the Ogoni people for their economic losses from 1958 to 2019 to the sum of #4,798,361,045,605.50,” he added.

Fabeke explained that the people were demanding the payout because “between 1958 till 2019, the land experience­d different high levels of environmen­tal pollution which studies show extensive oil contaminat­ions of rivers, creeks and ground waters in Ogoniland.”

The pollution, he added, had eliminated large areas of mangrove and caused oil spills of varying magnitudes as well as dilapidate­d and abandoned infrastruc­ture.

He claimed that as at November 1992, what was due to Ogoni was $86 billion in royalties and $84 billion for alleged environmen­tal damage.

Fabeke stated that government accepted the Ogoni environmen­tal debacle by inviting the United Nations Environmen­tal Programme (UNEP) to access the pollution, regretting that since 2011 when the global agency submitted its report, not even potable water had been provided in the oilrich community.

Consequent­ly, the group demanded for the provision of alternativ­e water supply for the people. On health, they urged government and oil multinatio­nals to ensure the right thing is done by way of audit and provision.

The OLI official pleaded with government to absolve Ken Saro-wiwa and the eight of the killings in 1996 that eventually claimed their lives. “Government should look into the UNEP report and make sure that all recommenda­tions are carried out and a committee set up to investigat­e the Ogoni cleanup, how it is being done and the company that got the contract.”

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