Niger Delta Communities, Era To FG: Regulate Oil Firms
Niger Delta Communities, Era To FG: Regulate Oil
Firms
OIL bearing and hosting communities of
the Niger Delta, Nigeria's main
oil and gas basin, and
Environmental Rights Action (ERA) rose from a
meeting in
Effurun, Delta State, resolving to mount pressure on
the
Federal Government to urgently regulate oil
activities in the country.
In a communique e-mailed to
AkanimoReports on Thursday, the two parties
explained why
government should regulate the extractive
industry.
According to them, ''the Nigerian Government
should exercise its
statutory powers to regulate oil and
other extractive industry
activities to bring an end to
impunity and environmental degradation in
the Niger Delta
and other parts of the country.
''Gas flaring, which is a
crime against the people and environment must
be halted
without further delay''.
The communique which was jointly signed by ERA ExecutiveDirector, Nnimmo Bassey, and Che Ibegura, of the Host Communities Netwok, observed that government was yet to demonstrate sufficient commitment to reviewing the nation’s electoral laws to reflect the true yearnings of Nigerians for participatory democracy
According to them, ''the political landscape is
still dominated by
individuals and political groups that
are not committed to good
governance but rather, personal
and class enrichment, though civil
society groups played
active roles in the return of democracy to the
country in
1999 after over 30 years of military dictatorship,
they
failed to seize the political space created by that
epoch episode''.
Continuing, they claimed that though
Nigerians are determined to
exercise their civic rights
as the large turnout at the recent voter’s
registration
exercise showed, the political process is yet to be
fully
owned by them, ''the nation’s law makers are yet
to exhibit commitment
to reviewing obsolete environmental
laws and initiating
environment-friendly law''
They
argued that if the ongoing political process does not result
in
free, fair and credible elections in the governorship
and presidential
elections slated for April 2011, the
nation may face a serious crisis
which will result to the
electorate expressing total disenchantment
about
subsequent political processes and governance in the country
as a
whole, adding, ''journalists and civil society
groups are still
deliberately left out of votes counting
and other processes that will
make the elections
transparent and the peoples vote count''.
The meeting
further observed that there is an abysmally low
awareness
about the electoral laws and electioneering
processes among the Nigerian electorate, especially at the
grassroots, and that security personnel are still largely
unenlightened about their statutory roles in defending
democratic structures and are constantly fingered in
election rigging
''Women and vulnerable groups are
still largely underrepresented in
elective positions,
capitalism and neo-colonialism are part of the
structural
causes of poverty and mis-governance in Nigeria, and
the
entire African continent., Government policies on
environment and other
critical sectors are largely
top-bottom in approach, and mostly dictated by transnational
corporations whose interest is solely profit and not the
well-being of the people'', the meeting said.
Continuing,
they said, ''oil pollution, gas flaring and other
flagrant
abuses perpetrated by the oil and extractive
industry are still rife,
government is yet to wake up to
the reality of exploring alternatives to
fossil fuel in a
post-oil economy even when it has become clear that the
volatility of oil fields across the world will force most
nations to look away from fossil fuels, a development which
the oil multinationals will exploit to dodge remediating the
impacts of their activities in the already neglected Niger
Delta''. The ERA host communities meeting then made a
nine-point recommendation
as follows:
&
The Nigerian law makers embark on a truly comprehensive
review of
Nigeria’s electoral laws which will
ultimately guarantee transparent,
violence–free and
fair elections.
* Good, responsible and committed
government is one of the strategic
tools that Nigeria
must have and deploy in order to free itself from the
constraints that presently obstruct and threaten to
strangulate it.
* Non governmental organizations
and Civil Society should strengthen
their alliances,
network, and reach out to political allies to build
a
critical mass that will monitor elections and mobilize
the grassroots to ensure that the votes of the electorate
count.
* All stakeholders-communities, civil society
groups, government
agencies, the media, among others,
must work collaboratively to expose
unsound environmental
practices and mobilize for laws that will reverse
the
trend.
* CSOs and NGOs to work collaboratively with
INEC and the police to
ensure a peaceful, credible, free
and fair election
* That civil society and NGOs
should adequately mobilize Nigerians to
resist election
rigging and other actions by individuals and group
to
frustrate the conduct of free, fair and credible
elections in the
governorship and presidential elections
slated for April 2011
Women and the vulnerable
in the society must also be mobilized and
empowered to
exercise their civic rights and protected from the
fallouts
of resource conflicts.
* The Nigerian
Government should exercise its statutory powers
to
regulate oil and other extractive industry activities
to bring an end to impunity and environmental degradation in
the Niger Delta and other
parts of the country. Gas
flaring, which is a crime against the people
and
environment must be halted without further delay.
*
Need for a more concerted awareness and mobilization of
local
communities to resist gas flaring and other
unfriendly environmental
practices in the Niger Delta and
other parts of Nigeria where resource
conflicts are
rife.
* That all new oil finds be left in the soil.
This will necessarily
involve the stoppage of new oil
exploration as well as bidding and
allocation of new oil
and gas blocs. ERA’s comprehensive proposal on how revenue
shortfall will be avoided is recommended for adoption. The
planned exploitation of bitumen should also be rejected as
it will
inflict unmitigated catastrophe on communities
and raise new levels of
conflicts.
ENDS