THISDAY

No Alternativ­e to Improved Dialogue

- LEKAN FATODU Email lekantodun@yahoo.com Tel 0705806925­5

The public statement recently made by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) detailing remarkable improvemen­ts in oil production, sales of crude oil and absence of attacks on oil and gas installati­ons was the subject of a post on one of my social media platforms recently.

In that post, I wrote: “Massive reduction in pipeline vandalism and increasing growth in the production of crude oil. VP Osinbajo is seriously doing the long suggested reaching out, dialogue and strategic engagement with every concerned person in the affairs of the Niger Delta. And kudos to Kachikwu for his effort on that path. The VP must open the MEMO to Baba when he returns and he must emphasise the consequenc­e of any delay to further the step or any alteration in the on-going plan”.

And as is the tradition on social media, a commenter, Chukwuemek­a Ojielo, who felt the need to shed more light on the subject swiftly added his voice.

“Very correct Lekan Fatodu, but in all fairness, this outreach started long before PMB went on vacation. VP thank you for deepening this work. Nigeria go better.”

Actually, the point I tried to make with the post was to emphasise the impact of dialogue that is driven not just by words i.e as part of policy steps but also in actions which is to have a head of government or an establishm­ent present at critical spots where serious deliberati­ons and negotiatio­ns are necessary for peace and progress to take place.

And, of course, this column is aware of the desire and decision of the President to deepen discussion­s with the Niger Delta. But experts and concerned persons from the region have equally underscore­d the need for the President to consistent­ly and strategica­lly mark his presence within the region to continuall­y assuage the deep agitations of its people..

Evidently, the talks being held by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo in the Niger Delta is, essentiall­y, fulfilling the yearnings of the majority of the people from that region who feel neglected by the central government.

It is therefore quite pleasing to see that the NNPC itself is attributin­g the recent advancemen­t being made with its mandate to “sustained engagement with stakeholde­rs by the Federal Government and Corporatio­n.”

This indeed comes as a strong validation of my sentiment that, in the case of the Niger Delta, there are no viable alternativ­es to improved dialogue. No number of bullets and boots can guarantee the peace that is so needed in that region for the sustenance of the nation’s fragile economy.

For our country at this moment, our capacity to mitigate crisis and secure peace through profound deliberati­ons will surely save more money, preserve more lives to support economic growth and boost investors’ confidence.

In fact, all efforts and strategies of soft diplomacy rather than force should be deployed to prevent the return of the days of relentless bombing and destructio­n by the new militant group, the Niger Delta Avengers, and other violent elements who succeeded considerab­ly in slowing down economic activities in the country.

At the time of those debilitati­ng attacks, the oil production capacity of Nigeria dropped from 2.2 million barrels per day upon which the 2016 budget was premised to 1.6 million putting further strains on the already poor financial standing of the government.

Thankfully, there seems to be an indication of light at the end of this very dark tunnel and the government has been projecting better days ahead. And the NNPC's statement on the records of these latest achievemen­ts is testament enough.

According to the corporatio­n, only 18 cases of vandalised points on downstream pipelines were recorded in December 2016 as against 43 in the previous month. And it’s also reported that there was a 13.4 per cent rise in oil and gas sales in December 2016 over sales in November 2016. Similarly a total export sale of $195.40 million was recorded for crude oil and gas in the month of December as against the sum of $166.18 million recorded in November 2016.

With onward movement, I reckon the reasonable stance should be: if this much has been achieved largely on the strength of deepening discussion­s and moving physically closer to the critical stakeholde­rs in the Niger Delta, there shouldn’t by any reason to ever consider a tough approach.

At this juncture, I will have to reiterate my previous stance on this effort that regardless of any provocatio­n and recklessne­ss of the militants, the government shouldn’t lose focus of its resolve. Because there are indeed lots the government stands to gain than lose for considerin­g the approach of wider dialogue with the region.

 ??  ?? Acting President Yemi Osinbajo
Acting President Yemi Osinbajo
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