South East, South South demand 65% oil wells

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Dr. Ibe Kachikwu
Dr. Ibe Kachikwu

Lawmakers drawn from the South- South and South East states Houses of Assembly rose from their inaugural joint session at the weekend with a call to the Fed­eral Government to review the ownership structure of oil wells in the country.

According to the lawmakers who met in Owerri, Imo State, the people of the Niger Delta region should possess at least 65 percent of the oil wells contrary to the pres­ent ownership structure where less than 10 percent of the oil blocks are owned by their people.

This, they said, would facilitate rapid development of the region, which they said was being weighed down by the present pay­ment mode of derivative oil funds.

“There is an urgent need for the Federal Government of Nigeria to put in place ad­equate machinery that would ensure direct payment of derivative oil funds into the hands of Niger Delta Benefiting communi­ties” the principal officers and members of the Houses of Assembly said.

The joint session had in attendance speak­ers and deputy speakers of Abia, Akwa Ibom, Anambra, Bayelsa, Rivers, Cross River, Delta, Ebonyi, Edo, Enugu and Imo states.

According to the lawmakers: “Legislators of the Houses of Assembly in the South- South and South East can no longer watch helplessly as our region drifts aimlessly while our people walk the razor edge under the strain of impoverishment, environmental degradation, insecurity and uncertainty on the one hand and the destruction of oil/gas installations and the attendant consequences including their impact on the ecosystem and the economy on the other hand.”

They urged the youth to shun confronta­tion, violence and militancy as a means of agitation for the redress of the zone.

“They must embrace dialogue and diplo­macy and channel their grievances through various constituted platforms”

The lawmakers not only flayed the evil acts of kidnapping, hostage taking and bursting of oil pipelines but stressed that militants from the zones should be constituted into an officially recognized brigade for the protec­tion of oil installations

“They should among other things be charged with the responsibility to halt the rise of other offensive militant groups who may from time to time threaten to spring up.”

The lawmakers advised the Presidency to direct the security agencies in the country to brace up and be alive to their constitu­tional responsibility of protecting lives and property.

“They must save the people of the geo-political zones from the hands of the marauding herdsmen. Governments of the South-East and South-South geo-political zones should set up a high powered joint judicial panel of inquiry to unravel the facts and circumstances surrounding the inces­sant attacks by the herdsmen and determine the best way to prevent its recurrence in the zones. They should also establish special task force drawn from the various security agen­cies and neighborhood watch in each local government to checkmate the excesses of herdsmen and prosecute them.”

The legislators, who called for more proac­tive measures to address the activities of herdsmen, restated their commitments to pass bills restricting cattle rearing, prohibit­ing grazing of cattle from one location to another through farmlands thereby causing damages to farm lands, health hazards and obstruction of vehicular and human traffic. (Daily Sun)

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