OIL SPILLS: BAYELSA COMMUNITIES ACCUSE DPR, NOSDRA OF COMPLICITY...DEMANDS CLEAN-UP, COMPENSATION
OIL SPILLS: BAYELSA COMMUNITIES ACCUSE DPR, NOSDRA
OF COMPLICITY
...DEMANDS CLEAN-UP, COMPENSATION
Donald Sylva
The story on the plight of oil
Ravaged communities in Bayelsa State cannot be told in one clear swoop due to
the various conjectures and attachments arising from this debacle.
The suffering and smiling communities
in Bayelsa State, though in the midst of Wealth, have laid damning
accusations against the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) and another regulatory
body, National Oil Spills Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) of connivance
with oil multinationals in the destruction of their environment and leaving
them in an impoverished condition.
Four communities that suffered
devastating oil spills - Babragbene, Lasukugbene and Oyeregbene in Southern
Ijaw and Mbikiba in Brass local government areas - made the accusation during a
town hall meeting with members of the Bayelsa State Oil and Environmental
Commission (BSOEC) at Oyeregbene community.
The commission led by the Archbishop
of York in the United Kingdom, Dr. John Sentamu, was on a fact-finding tour of
oil spill and environmentally degraded communities in the state.
The communities, which demanded a
clean-up of their land and waterways as well as payment of compensation by the
oil multinationals operating in their areas, said Federal Agencies - DPR and
NOSDRA - were biased towards the International oil companies (IOCs) whenever
spills occur.
They claimed that the Joint
Investigation and Verification Reports were not always representative of the
actual incidents of spills that destroy their source of livelihood.
President of the Ijaw Association of
Oil and Gas Producing Communities, Comrade Yabrou Tou, who spoke on behalf of
the aggrieved communities, bemoaned the total neglect of host communities by
the oil multinationals despite series of appeals on the effect of the spills on
their environment.
He shed tears as he narrated his
ordeal on how he was dragged before a court in Abuja for reporting Chevron to
the Nigeria Human Rights Commission for refusing to clean up a spill that
occurred from its facility.
Comrade Tou said the incident, which
occurred in 2015 at an oil rig, spilled its contents for six months
non-stop.
"The oil firm refused to pay
compensation after initially accepting responsibility for the damage to the
environment, saying it occurred on their Right of Way (ROW).
Polluted Waters of the Niger Delta |
Also speaking on behalf of the four
communities, Pastor Ofongo Alamene and a fisherwoman, Mrs Flora Soridei, called
on the multinational companies to live up to their corporate social
responsibility by providing social amenities like potable water, electricity,
healthcare and payment of compensation.
Alamene said: “The multinational
companies know that a divided house cannot stand,so they sponsor violence,
which is working for them.
"They also know the level of
ignorance of the communities. They get them to sign the wrong documents, which
render the communities defenceless when they avoid repairing their pipelines
that are long overdue. Some of the pipelines have stayed up to 40 years whereas
their lifespan is 20 years.”
Pastor Alamene accused the oil majors
of non-implementation of the terms of their General Memorandum of Understanding
(GMOU) signed with host communities.
"No medical or material supports
are given to victims of oil spills while projects promised in the GMOUs are
either haphazardly done or abandoned midway with flimsy excuses," he
said.
The community leaders reported that
Shell removed Oyeregbene community from the list of beneficiaries of its GMOU
because of claims of missing equipment.
They also said that Agip provided a
six-classroom block in the community but abandoned the construction of a jetty
and did a one-kilometre concrete road only half way.
The community leaders however
expressed gratitude to Governor Seriake Dickson for setting up the commission
to address their plight.
The Bayelsa State Commissioner
for Environment, Ebipatei Apaingolo, in his remarks, said the commission
was established to examine the impact of oil exploration activities on host
communities in the state.
According to him, the oil companies
have been neglecting their responsibilities to clean up the environment and pay
compensation to affected communities.
Other members of the commission on
the tour included Prof. Michael Watts, Prof. Emeseh Engobo, Prof. Lucky Worika,
Dr. Anna Zalik, Dr. Catherine Nwajiaku-Dahou and Dr. Isaac Osuoka, pioneer
spokesman of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) and founder of Social Action, a Niger
Delta-based CSO.
Comments
Post a Comment