HIGH INFANT MORTALITY RATE, AVOIDABLE DEATHS IN BAYELSA - DICKSON ...ESTABLISHES COMMISSION OF INQUIRY INTO EFFECTS ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ...ARCHBISHOP ÒF YORK CANVASSES INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
HIGH INFANT
MORTALITY RATE, AVOIDABLE DEATHS IN BAYELSA - DICKSON
...ESTABLISHES COMMISSION OF INQUIRY INTO EFFECTS
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
...ARCHBISHOP ÒF YORK CANVASSES INTERNATIONAL
SUPPORT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
By Victor Ologbo
Gov. Seriake Dickson with members of the Bayelsa State Commission of Inquiry on Environmental Degradation |
The Governor of Bayelsa State, the Honourable Henry Seriake Dickson, has
again attacked the multinational oil firms for brazenly destroying the Niger
Delta environment without adherence to international best practices in their
activities.
The Governor said that the mindless activities of the multinational oil
firms in the oil rich state was responsible for the high infant mortality rate
in Bayelsa and indeed the Niger Delta.
The State Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Daniel
Iworiso-Markson, quoted the Governor to have said that a UN survey revealed
that crude oil spillage causes the death of over 16,000 infants within the
first month of birth in the Niger Delta.
Dickson noted that the Niger Delta environment was in turmoil and the
livelihood of the people in peril because of the insensitive degradation of the
environment by international oil firms who are driven solely by a quest to make
money.
He said that the flagrant abuse of the Niger Delta environment as
clearly shown by available statistical evidence, indicated that about 40
million barrels of crude oil are spilled into the damaged environment of the
Niger Delta as opposed to four million barrels in the United States.
He lamented that the ravages oil production had reduced life expectancy
in Bayelsa and other oil producing states in the Nigeria by ten years below the
National Average.
The Governor said that the Bayelsa State Government under his leadership
would intensify proactive measures to attract necessary attention to the
mindless destruction of the Niger Delta environment and the People’s means of
livelihood by the oil firms.
Consequently, the Governor inaugurated a ten-man Commission of
Inquiry on Environmental Degradation under the chairmanship òf the Archbishop
òf York, Dr. John Sentamu.
The Governor noted that the panel of highly reputable local and foreign
experts had a nine-point mandate to investigate “the environmental, health,
socio-economic, cultural and human damage caused by operations of both local
and multinational oil companies.”
Governor Dickson noted that the panel was set up to hold oil firms accountable
to the imperative to adopt international best practices in their oil
exploration activities.
He added that the IOCs had a responsibility to adopt the same
operational standard to the environment of Bayelsa as Norway, Scotland
and the United States.
The commission has a mandate to hold public and private hearing and
submits the report of its finding in nine months.
In his remarks, the Chairman of the Commission, Dr. John Sentumau
promised a holistic investigation into the impact of oil spillage in Bayelsa
and the Niger Delta.
He expressed shock at the detrimental effect of oil spillage and called
on the international community to give priority attention to the protection of
the environment which he described as the collective heritage of mankind.
The committee comprises of a former President of Ghana, Dr. John Kufour,
Baroness Valerie Amos, Prof. Engobo Emeseh, Dr. Anna Zalik, Dr. Kathryn
Nwajiaku-Dahou (Secretary), Prof. Roland Hodler and Prof. Michael Watts.
The immediate past Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice,
Barr. Kemasuode Wodu, is the commission’s Legal Counsel.
Comments
Post a Comment