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Niger Delta Avengers accuses government of delaying dialogue to get drones

By Saxone Akhaine (Northern Bureau Chief), Mohammed Abubakar and Otei Oham (Abuja) and Chido Okafor (Warri)
28 July 2016   |   4:39 am
The Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) has accused the Federal Government of foot-dragging dialogue with militants, in order to execute a devious plot against Niger Delta people.
Gov Seriake Dickson

Gov Seriake Dickson

• Bayelsa gov Dickson cautions army on use of force
• Okowa seeks better intelligence on tackling militancy

The Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) has accused the Federal Government of foot-dragging dialogue with militants, in order to execute a devious plot against Niger Delta people.

In a statement on its website, the group said intelligence available to it indicates that proposed dialogue by the Federal Government is a strategy to buy time, while drones (Unmanned Aerial Vehicles) from the United States are being expected.

Mudoch Agbinibo, spokesman of the group, which has been bombing the nation’s critical oil infrastructure, said the development “makes us wonder what kind of country this is? We can all see that the President Buhari-led government is a fraud. They are not serious about any dialogue, yet they make it seem the Niger Delta Avengers are the ones not ready.

“Mr. President, you can purchase all the drones in Europe and the United States. They won’t stop the Niger Delta Avengers from bringing the country’s economy to zero. The worse you can do is kill poor, innocent people, which the military is good at. But know that the Nigerian economy will suffer. Note also, you will not be able to export one litre of crude in the Niger Delta. Just intensify oil exploration in the North East. As for the ones in the Niger Delta, forget about it, because the Nigerian government won’t export a drop from our land.”

Meanwhile, Bayelsa State governor, Seriake Dickson, has faulted statement credited to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, that the military would be compelled to use force, in order to quell militancy by the Niger Delta, if ongoing attempt at dialogue fails.

Speaking with State House correspondents after a private meeting with President Buhari at the Presidential Villa, the governor noted that the threat by the army chief is capable of harming ongoing efforts by government at finding solution to the crisis.

“The military solution, as I have always maintained, is not the right option. We are hopeful that the ongoing discussions will yield desired results. I have always been in support of negotiations, of dialogue as the sustainable way forward. Dialogue will bring out the issues and then we will all unite around these common issues to move our country forward,” said Dickson.

This comes as Delta State governor, Ifeanyi Okowa, called for increased intelligence sharing among security agencies, in order to curb militancy in the region.Okowa, who decried drop in revenue accruing both to the state and the Federation Account, said: “We are worst hit by the present events in the creeks. We pray that these activities of militants stop, so that we can maintain oil production without breaches, as our revenue has dropped drastically.”

The governor spoke, yesterday, in Asaba, the state capital, when he received the Commander of Operation Delta Safe, Rear Admiral Joseph Okojie, who led top officers of the multi-service task force on a courtesy call.

Also, member of the House of Representatives Committee on Petroleum (Ibirapa East/Ido Constituency, Oyo State), Sunday Adepoju, said, yesterday, that the current agitation in the region is aimed at attracting the attention of the Federal Government to the plight of the people, urging President Buhari to speed up dialogue.

In an interview, Adepoju said: “We have to address the issue of militancy, so that they will stop blowing up oil pipelines. If they are given their dues, they will be happy. We have to look at their grievances. The area has been polluted, so is the water. Governments have to look into their demands and see how they can be helped, so that they will not die of hunger.”

Advice not to dialogue with the Avengers was, however, made by ex-Managing Director of the defunct Nigerian Airways, Captain Mohammed Joji, who described the activities of the militants as a declaration of war on the country.

“Fuel scarcity in the aviation sector is sabotage by the so-called Avengers. Pipeline vandalism must be brought to a halt, if the crisis must end. I am not an advocate of negotiations with a terrorist group. The Federal Government should forget about democracy and go fire for fire with them,” he said.

4 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    Very bad news. The government does not care about its peoples.

  • Author’s gravatar

    The Niger Delta so called “avengers” are wasting a lot of time… they ought to have grounded the crude production by now so that the devil bedeviling them can rest to start punishing them… Truly, they might have been neglected of course which is not a good one on the part of Government but whose fault will it be, to realize a president (President Goodluck Jonathan) from their zone neglected them… it’s high time the “avenger” understood that nobody can hold the government into ransome otherwise, they will end up wasting their own blood without improvement whatever…There is a lot of wisdom in the saying that PEN is Mightier than Sword.

  • Author’s gravatar

    I LIKE THE LAST SPEAKER CAPTAIN MOHAMMED JOJI, FORGET ABOUT DEMOCRACY AND GO FIRE FOR FIRE

  • Author’s gravatar

    A corruption fighter and oil pipelines bomber; who is a fraud,?