The Federal Government would soon start discussions with the United
Nations and Ogoni communities to begin implementation of the UN
Environment Programme Report on Ogoniland, a top official said on Friday.
The Minister for Petroleum Resources, Mrs Dieziani Allison-Madueke, said
this during a meeting with Ogoni leaders at Bori in Khana Local Government
Area of Rivers.
Allison-Madueke, represented by the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry,
Mr Danladi Kifasi, said the Federal Government, through its agency, the
Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project, had implemented some of the
“transitional phase” of the report.
She said, “The ministry has invited the relevant UN institutions to work
with it to inject fresh urgency inro the matter and to collaboratively and
collectively address this issue.
“We will be working with the UN, Ogoni communities and relevant Nigerian
agencies, to pool our collective knowledge and construct a road map to
deliver a comprehensive remediation programme with a focus on immediate
delivery and restitution.
“We are fast-tracking the process of implementation by engaging the
services of international experts to begin the implementation of the UNEP
Report as soon as possible.”
Allison-Madueke said the Federal Government would also compel companies
responsible for hydrocarbon-pollution of other areas in the Niger Delta to
clean up the areas with their own fund.
The minister said this development led to the setting up of the HYPREP in
July 2012, to clean up all communities impacted by hydrocarbon
contamination in the country.
The minister said that the Federal Government had released funds for the
anticipated clean-up, to end the sufferings of the Ogoni people.
A member of the National Assembly, Sen. Magnus Abe (APC-Rivers East), who
spoke on behalf of the Ogoni people, called for the establishment of an
Ogoni Environmental Restoration Project to replace HYPREP.
He said, “The UNEP Report is a recommendation that focused only on
Ogoniland and not the entire Nigeria and as such, an Ogoni Environmental
Restoration Project should be set up for environment clean up alone.”
Abe said no Ogoni son or daughter would play politics with the
implementation of the UNEP report.
“We have invested too much; we have lost too much; we have hoped too much;
we have planned too much; we cannot, at this hour, begin to play with what
is to us a matter of life and death,” he said.
The Senator urged Ogoni people to support the initiative of the Federal
Government in opening dialogue with them on the implementation of the
report.
“Our demand is clear; the UNEP report should be implemented. We want to
thank you for saying that the money for Ogoni will be spent on Ogoni,” Abe
said.