The Presidency yesterday
assured the Ijaw that it has nothing against them and therefore has no
intention whatsoever harass or persecute them. But it warned that whoever
violates the law should be ready to face the consequences.
The Presidency was
responding to suggestion by Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark, that the Buhari
administration is harassing his people.
He cited the trial of
ex-militant leader Government Ekpemupolo alias Tompolo for theft and money
laundering and the cancellation of the proposed Maritime University in Delta
State. The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) expressed similar sentiments yesterday.
Speaking to The Nation
on the phone last night, the Special Adviser to the President on Media and
Publicity, Femi Adesina, said it was untrue to say the administration is out to
punish any ethnic group in the country.
He said: “Anybody who is
a follower of events in the country knows that this administration persecutes
nobody.“The administration is
just asking all Nigerians to do the right thing and anybody that goes contrary
to the law will answer, irrespective of where the person comes from.
“So if anybody says a
particular group is being targeted for attack or assault or persecution, right
thinking Nigerians know that that is not true.”
Chief Clark in the open
letter to Buhari described Tompolo as a gentleman who could not have been
responsible for the recent pipeline attacks in Delta State.
He said: “In the course
of my interactions with these militant leaders, I discovered that Tompolo is
one of the most responsible and peace-loving militant leaders. This was also
observed by the then President, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo and late President
Umaru Musa Ya’Ardua.
“That was also one of
the reasons why during one of the discussions I had with the former President,
Chief Obasanjo in February, 2007, he said to me that he learnt that Tompolo was
not well educated, that he was wondering what appointment or position could be
given to him to keep him engaged and to effect permanent peace in the area.
“I suggested to him that
because of his (Tompolo’s) dexterity, he should for a payment, be engaged to
provide surveillance for the oil pipelines and supervise oil installations
together with his colleagues in the various communities.”
He condemned the
pipeline vandalization that trailed the arrest order issued against Tompolo
last week by a Federal High Court in Lagos after the ex-militant failed to show
up to answer charges for theft and money laundering.
Clark said the
perpetrators of the sabotage should “be fished out and punished for their
actions.”
Clark faulted
government’s decision to discontinue work on the Nigerian Maritime University. The take-off campus for
the university, Mieka Dive Training Institute Limited/Gte, was sold to
government for N13 billion Clark said: “Tompolo is
one of the owners of Mieka Dive Training Institute Limited/Gte. The Nigerian
Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) entered into an agreement with
the institute to purchase the institute covering an expanse of 6.597 hectares
of well sand-filled land together with all the structures thereon, for the sum
of N13,072,564,822.00 (thirteen billion, seventy two million, five hundred
& sixty four thousand, eight hundred & twenty two naira only), as the
take-off campus for the Nigeria Maritime University, Okerenkoko.”
He said: “This
legitimate transaction was approved by the Federal Executive Council at its
34th Executive Council, EC; meeting presided over by the former President, His
Excellency, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan.”
Clark took exception to
a statement by Transport Minister Rotimi Amaechi who was quoted as saying: “who
will attend the university (Maritime University)? How many parents will allow their
children to go to such place where it proposed to site the university…”
The Ijaw leader said:
“If this statement is true, it is very insulting, callous and vindictive on the
people by Mr. Rotimi Amaechi. It is all aimed at executing his plans of personal
vendetta against the people of the Niger Delta.
IYC spokesman, Eric
Omare, told AFP: “Our position is that due process should be followed. We
support an anti-corruption war that is done within the ambit of the law.
“We seriously oppose
selective prosecution and political victimization.”
The IYC condemned the
pipeline vandalization but also claimed that the military had invaded several
Ijaw communities in Delta State, destroying properties and causing injuries.
“The Ijaw people are not
at war with the federal government. We call on the military to exercise
restraint in their actions. There is no basis to attack innocent villagers,”
said Omare.
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