As Military Focuses On N'Delta Avengers, Boko Haram Recaptures Major Territory
The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) has come out
hard on former President Goodluck Jonathan and other Niger Delta
leaders, accusing them of “ungodly conspiracy of silence” over recent
wave of attacks on oil facilities in the region by the group called
Niger Delta Avengers.
Before a government amnesty between in 2008, MEND was the umbrella groups for all armed youth groups in the Niger Delta agitating for increased control of the proceeds from the exploitation of country’s oil resources.
The Avengers recently started attacks on oil and gas installations in
the region, cutting Nigeria’s daily oil production from about 2.2
million to 1.7 million barrels.
The new group has vowed to reduce Nigeria’s oil production to zero until
the federal government concedes to its demand of a sovereign Niger
Delta state.
In a statement on Tuesday, MEND called the attacks “unprovoked”, saying
many perpetrators were former MEND commanders who embraced the previous
governments’ amnesty programme “without knowing why they took up arms in
the first place”.
The group noted the sustained neglect of the region by successive
administrations in the country since oil was discovered in commercial
quantity in 1958, saying “Nigeria has short-changed the Niger Delta
region and pillaged the commonwealth generated from the region in
association with International Oil Companies who have not done enough to
protect and sustain the environment”.
The statement, signed by Jomo Gbomo, said the group was concerned about
the situation in the region “particularly because of the colossal
failure of former President Goodluck Jonathan – an indigene of the
region, who was at the helm for six years – to address the remediation
of our environment”.
It however commended President Muhammadu Buhari for his commitment to clean up Ogoniland.
“What is more worrisome to us is the ungodly conspiracy of silence of
the region’s elite and their tacit support of the NDA’s conduct under
the pretext of a so-called ‘Niger Delta struggle’ which went to sleep in
luxury hotel suites in Abuja and around the world for the entire
duration of the six years of Mr. Jonathan’s binge and unmitigated
disaster as President,” MEND said.
The group said it was equally concerned about the “disproportionate use of force and the sheer unimaginable dimension of the on-going reprisal” by the Nigerian military which it said had done serious damage to the socio-political and economic lives of the people of the region.
While commiserating with the affected persons, families and communities,
MEND called on the international community as well as the National
Emergency Management Agency to dispatch relief materials to the region,
as a matter of utmost priority.
It warned communities against harbouring criminal elements, and also
urged the military high command to stick to the rules of engagement and
international best practices in their attempt to enforce rule of law.

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