Tag: INC

  • Installation of 5 new Ijaw kings in Ondo excites INC

    Installation of 5 new Ijaw kings in Ondo excites INC

    Ijaw National Congress (INC), on Sunday, commended Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu of Ondo State for recognising and installing five additional Ijaw kings in Arogbo-Ijaw kingdom, Ese-Odo Local Government Area.

    The State government had, on Thursday, presented staff of office to the new kings for Ijaw communities.

    President of INC, Prof. Benjamin Okaba, gave the commendation in an interview in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    Okaba, who was reacting to the installation of five new kings, applauded Akeredolu for his inclusive governance style and even spread of development projects.

    He congratulated the newly-installed kings, urging them to keep the Ijaw flag flying by propagating and preserving its revered culture in a manner reflective of the multi-ethnic nature of the state.

    Okaba said with his action, Akeredolu had written his name in gold and shown exemplary leadership in recognising and harnessing the ethic diversity of the state for peaceful co-existence.

    According to him, the entire Niger Delta region needs such a leadership approach.

    “Ijaw National Congress is very pleased with Gov. Rotimi Akeredolu for recognising and elevating five new Ijaw kingship stools in Ondo and installation of five new Ijaw kings.

    “We express the appreciation of all Ijaws in Nigeria and in the Diaspora to the governor.

    “This development has given a sense of belonging to all Ijaws in the Niger Delta region and we feel a sense of duty to express our gratitude to the act of justice and equity to the Ijaws.

    “We therefore, call on Edo and Akwa Ibom governors to borrow a leaf from Ondo State governor and uplift the status of Ijaws in their respective states.

    “The ancestral domains of the Ijaws are endowed with oil and gas reserves, which provide derivation revenue being used to develop other parts of the states.

    “Authoritative historical, archaeological and ethnographic facts have shown that the Ijaw people are the oldest aboriginal settlers in the Niger Delta region and must be accorded respect in the states and local government areas they have been  arbitrarily balkanised into.

    “INC decries all acts of land grabbing, marginalisation, denial and distortion of the Ijaw cultural heritage under any guise which are ongoing in some states in the region,” Okaba said.

  • Ijaw leaders lament presence of armed herdsmen

    Ijaw leaders lament presence of armed herdsmen

    Ijaw leaders, under the auspices of the Ijaw National Congress (INC) and the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), have cautioned against invasion of Ijaw communities by armed men, suspected to be herdsmen.

    They observed that there has been an alarming invasion of communities and farmlands of Ijaw and indeed Niger Delta people by “these intruders who wield dangerous and lethal weapons”.

    They, therefore, called on “the Niger Delta states to properly enforce their anti-open grazing laws and protect lives and property.

    They also guaranteed confidence in the people to access their farms and make a living without fear and apprehension, especially because lost lives are irreplaceable.”

    These remarks are contained in a communique issued on Wednesday by the National President of the INC, Prof. Benjamin Okaba.

    The communique was signed after a one-day joint leadership meeting of the INC and the IYC held at the Ijaw House, Yenagoa, Bayelsa capital.

    “These herdsmen have carried out gruesome killings of our brothers and sisters in their communities and farmlands across Bayelsa, Delta, Rivers and Ondo States, among others.

    “The gory tales of the barbaric and dastardly acts of these agents of provocation have headlined reports, especially in the past couple of years,” he said.

    Among INC national officials in attendance were Atamuno Atamuno, First Vice President; Ebipamowei Wodu, Secretary; Philip Agu, Treasurer; and Kenneth Odiowei, Financial Secretary.

    Also, IYC officers in attendance included Frank Pukon, National Secretary; Ebilade Ekerefe, National Spokesman; Clever Inodu, Central Zonal Chairman; Kroma Eleki, Deputy Chairman, Conference of Ijaw Traditional Rulers and Elders (CITRE); Austin Enekorogha, Secretary; Gabriel Benamaisia, Clerk, National Representative Council (NRC); and Princess Ebiseri A. J, Deputy Leader, NRC.

    Okaba recalled a recent incident on January 24, when some suspected armed herdsmen were reported to have brutally murdered a father and his son at their farm in Toru-Angiama in the Patani Local Government Area of Delta State.

    He said, “On the 25th of January 2023, a woman was butchered in her farm at Sabagriea community in Kolokuma/Opokuma LGA of Bayelsa State.

    “Also in Bayelsa, suspected herdsmen, in February 2021, attacked a farmer and his son on their farm in Otuoke community, Ogbia LGA.

    “The incessant violent invasions and attacks are designed to annex and control spaces and lands by these herdsmen and their masters with the sinister plot to subjugate Ijaw nation and the Niger Delta.

    “We strongly condemn in its entirety, all clandestine attempts laced with terrorist agenda by herdsmen and their masters to take over the bushes of Ijaw nation.

    “We are resolved to resist any attempts by strange elements to terrorize and chase away Ijaw people from their ancestral lands and heritage.

    “We support all anti-open grazing laws duly enacted by the Houses of Assembly of Niger Delta states and assented to by their Governors to promote peace and sustainable development.”

  • Sylvester Oromoni: Inquisition resumes as groups plead for speedy justice

    Sylvester Oromoni: Inquisition resumes as groups plead for speedy justice

    The Ikeja Magistrates’  Court handling the inquisition into the death of Sylvester Oromoni, a student of Dowen College, Lekki in Lagos, resumed its sitting on Monday.

    The sitting was, however, held behind closed doors with only a few relations allowed in.

    Oromoni, 12, a student of Dowen College, Lekki, Lagos died on Nov. 30, 2021, allegedly from injuries sustained in an attack.

    The Oromoni family is represented on the inquest by Femi Falana (SAN) while Bernard Onigah is representing the Nigeria Bar Association.

    The accused persons and the Lagos government are equally represented by their lawyers.

    Meanwhile, some groups have called for a speedy inquest “in the interest of justice”.

    The groups spoke in Lagos after the sitting. Among the groups was Justice For Oromoni, whose Coordinator, Mr Regent Youmor, called on the Judiciary to ensure that the late student’s case was expiditeously concluded.

    He begged that the case should be quickly heard to ensure quick dispensation of justice.

    “To the layman, it will look like justice delayed if the case drags. This is a national issue; it is not ethnic and not solely legal. It is more of traditional and moral,” he opined.

    Mr Ebitimi Dio-Posibi, Chairman, Ijaw National Congress (INC), Lagos Chapter, who also spoke on the matter, said that his group would appreciate if judgement was delivered “as fast as possible”.

    He said an expeditious hearing was important because “the late Omoroni has not been buried”.

    “That Oromoni has not been buried a year after his demise is against the customs and traditions of the Ijaw people, particularly as he was just a child,” he said.

    Miss Winifred Ibitaka, Vice Chairperson, Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), told NAN that she was not happy that the case was “taking time”.

    Ibitaka emphasised the need for justice to be delivered on time “so that the boy can be buried”.

  • OML 46: Ijaw National Congress applauds Diri’s effort to recover oilfield

    OML 46: Ijaw National Congress applauds Diri’s effort to recover oilfield

    The Ijaw National Congress (INC), a socio-cultural organisation, has commended Gov. Douye Diri, for his effort to recover the state government’s Oil Mining Licence (OML) 46 in the Atala oilfield.

    This is contained in a statement issued on Tuesday by Prof Benjamin Okaba, the President of INC.

    The group noted that the decision of Diri to engage President Muhammadu Buhari in a bid to reclaim the oil asset for the government and good people of Bayelsa was a step in the right direction.

    ”The governor’s Oct. 5 meeting with Buhari in Abuja where he sought the president’s intervention to resolve the orchestrated controversy around OML 46, revoked in April 2020, is a demonstration of his leadership in the affairs and wellbeing of the Ijaw nation,” he said.

    ‘We applauded Diri for also seeking the Federal Government’s intervention in road infrastructure in the state and the need to adopt the Bayelsa Medical University as a suitable institution and location for the South-South region in the proposed establishment of six new federal universities of medical sciences and biomedical technology in the country.

    “We thank President Buhari for expressing his commitment to Gov. Diri to urgently look into the OML 46 controversy and ensure that it is resolved in favour of Bayelsa because that is the right thing to do in the interest of peace, justice and equity,” the group said.

    Okaba further said that the INC equally applauds the Senate for dispassionately investigating the OML 46 saga and resolving that the oilfield be returned to its original owner.

    “Findings, according to reports, by the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions that the Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), formerly Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), could not show evidence that the President directed the re-allocation of Atala oilfield to a private firm is very instructive and revealing.

    “It is much more instructive and revealing that the Committee also upbraided the NUPRC for flouting a presidential directive that the original owners of OML 46 be given the right of first refusal in the award of the oilfield,”Okaba said.

    He said the INC is in solidarity with Diri and his quest as a leader of Ijaw nation to pursue justice concerning the Atala oilfield through peaceful means to a logical conclusion for the benefit of Bayelsa and Ijaw people.

    Newsmen reports that Buhari said he will restore the OML 46, to Bayelsa  with “promptness and immediacy.”

    “I will respond to your requests as quickly as possible,” Buhari said.

    Newsmen reports that on Oct. 6, the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges And Public Petitions mandated the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPR), to restore the Atala Marginal Oil field (OML 46) to its former owners.

    The oil field, which was originally owned by the Bayelsa Oil Company Limited (BOCL), Hardy Oil Nigeria Limited (HONL) and Century Exploration and Production Limited, was reallocated to Halkin Exploration and Production Company Limited (Halkin E&P), through a letter dated July 7, 2021 by the then regulatory agency, Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), over alleged inability to bring the Atala Field to production.

  • Pains of Niger Delta run through my veins – NNPP Senatorial candidate

    Pains of Niger Delta run through my veins – NNPP Senatorial candidate

    Candidate of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) for Delta South Senatorial District for the 2023 elections, Commodore Omatseye Nesiama (rtd) has said the pains of the Niger Delta region run through his veins.

    Nesiama, who said this during a consultative visit to the President of the Ijaw National Congress (INC), Professor Benjamin Okaba in Bomadi on Tuesday, lamented that the development of the Delta South Senatorial District is not commensurate with the resources domiciled in the district.

    He ascribed this to the inabilities to influence positive developments from the centre to the district, while also alluding to the fact that the people have resorted themselves to fate with the belief that they cannot change the tide to their favour.

    “The truth is that the Delta South Senatorial District, despite the resources, is still very poor when compared to some other senatorial districts in the country. Why it is so is not farfetched. There are certain things that have been in place for a while, and we have started growing used to those things being that way. We are made to believe that it is impossible for us to make changes that will better our well-being. But I dare say today that it is possible for us to get up and go higher,” Nesiama said.

    The NNPP candidate who further said that “the pains of the Niger Delta run through my veins” appealed to the INC President to help him carry the message of hope in the language the people understand and that all hope is not lost as his candidacy, which is running with the slogan “It Is Possible,” is focused on a quality representation that is leveraged on the many years of his expertise and experience for the general benefit of the district.

    In his remarks, Professor Okaba commended Nesiama for exhibiting competence and for his vision of quality representation in his drive to represent the people of the oil-rich Delta South Senatorial District at the Red Chambers come 2023.

    Okaba noted that one of the major problems, among others facing the country is poor leadership-cum-representation. He promised to set up political machinery in a couple of weeks to engage political contestants to “let us know what they want to provide for the Ijaw Nation”.

    Presented with the manifesto of the NNPP’s candidate, the INC President noted that though the country’s constitution is skewed to favour a section of the country, the issue of the south is worsened by those who offer poor representation in the centre.

    “We have people who are lily-livered, we have people who are ignoramus going there to serve the interest of the people worsening the situation. Even if we don’t have the majority, we should have the say and be heard. Look at Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State giving quality representation to the Niger Delta on issues because he has the mental capacity, the experience and all,” Okaba said.

    Speaking further he added: “I have accessed you; you have displayed content and you have displayed competence. You have the dexterity to move on, the assurance I want to give to you is that we are taking very serious note of you and what you represent. We have taken serious consideration of the quality representation you are, and we are going to provide another platform where you will address the wider section of the Ijaw people of Niger Delta”.

  • Ijaw congress inaugurates committee on pipeline surveillance contract

    Ijaw congress inaugurates committee on pipeline surveillance contract

    The Ijaw National Congress (INC) on Friday inaugurated a committee to interface with some angry youth groups over the pipeline surveillance contract re-awarded to Chief Government Ekpemupolo.

    Newsmen reports that Ekpemupolo, an ex-militant leader is a former commander of the defunct Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), also known as Tompolo.

    Prof Benjamin Okaba, President of the INC, performed the inauguration of the five-member committee at the Ijaw House, Yenagoa, Bayelsa, in the presence of other officials of the apex Ijaw socio-cultural organisation.

    Also witness to the event were INC’s national secretary, Ebipamowei Wodu; central zone chairman, Doodei Week, and other Ijaw stakeholders.

    The committee is headed by the Financial Secretary of the INC, Kennedy Odiowei, while a former President of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Oyinfie Jonjon, will serve as Secretary.

    Other members of the committee are Dan Ekpebide, Ambah Binaebi and Eneyo Athanasius.

    Okaba explained that the intervention was necessitated by the need to douse the seeming rising tensions among various groups and persons in Ijaw nation and the Niger Delta over the Tompolo job.

    “Recently, the INC has been buffeted with reports of brewing tensions amongst various Ijaw groups as a result of the pipeline surveillance contract. We frown at such divisive tendencies and propensities.

    “The purpose of this committee is very clear: to identify and interact with the various and divergent groups and see how their individual interests can be taken care of in the spirit of brotherliness,” Okaba said.

    Okaba called for unity and understanding in the Niger Delta, stressing that the pipeline protection job awarded to Tompolo through the NNPC, must not be a source of conflict and infighting in the area.

    The Ijaw leader said the region and its people had already suffered monumental invasions and harassments by armed federal troops over the years on account of their oil and gas resources.

    He stated that all concerned stakeholders had “a responsibility to ensure that Ijaw land is not made a battlefield for the shedding of blood and destruction of property and values”.

    He said it was very important for Ijaws to avoid internal squabbles and reftrain from sowing the seeds of discord or promoting the Pull-Him-Down Syndrome.

    “We should rather resist external aggressors and invaders of Ijaw territory. We must be patriotic to the peace and unity of Ijaw nation. This, at all times, must not be lost on us all.”

    He said it was unfortunate and ridiculous that Ijaw brothers were threatening to kill themselves over crumbs (not even by way of Ownership of Oil Wells) given to them to help protect national assets.

    Okaba urged the committee to reach out to the feuding groups and harmonise their individual interests to ensure that Ijaw unity and agenda were not compromised.

    Newsmen reports that the committee is expected to submit a preliminary report within two weeks.

  • INC cautions FG over alleged plot by northern Reps to alter derivation principle

    INC cautions FG over alleged plot by northern Reps to alter derivation principle

    By Emman Ovuakporie

    The President of Ijaw National Congress (INC) worldwide, Prof Benjamin Okaba has cautioned the Federal Government that any attempt to alter Section 162, the portion on derivation will be resisted by the South South geo-political zone of Nigeria.

    TheNewsGuru.com, (TNG) reports the INC in a statement apparently reacting to stories in the media space on a grand plot to alter the sharing formula vowed that all resources within the shores of Niger Delta will be protected by indigenes.

    In the statement simply entitled: ‘ LET THE SLEEPING DOG LIE’ and signed by Prof Okaba stated that:

    “The leadership of the pan-Ijaw group, the Ijaw National Congress (Worldwide) has received with utter consternation and disbelief a story circulating in the social media, of a purported bill sponsored by 59 members of the House of Representatives, who are of northern extraction with an intent to delete section 162 sub section 2 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended). The section under reference which has to do with the management of “the Federation Account”, particularly subsection 2 states inter alia:

    “The President upon the receipt of advice from the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission, shall table before the National Assembly proposals for revenue allocation from the Federation Account, and in determining the formula, the National Assembly shall take into account, the allocation principles especially those of population, equality of States, internal revenue generation, land mass, terrain as well as population density;
    Provided that the principle of derivation shall be constantly reflected in any approved formula as being not less than thirteen per cent of the revenue accruing to the Federation Account from any natural resources”.

    “What could have been the motivation for these 59 northern lawmakers to contemplate sponsoring this obnoxious bill other than the fact that it provides for “derivation principle… as being not less than thirteen percent”? It is unfortunate that some Honourable men of our green chambers are taking delight in fanning the embers of chaos, national disintegration and the total collapse of the Nigerian state.

    “We are not sure if these persons have measured in any manner the eventual consequences of their intended action on both the economic and political space of Nigeria.

    “We can assure these apostles of discord and chaos that in this their planned voodoo game, the oil-producing Ijaw nation and other oil-producing and resource-endowed ethnic nationalities in the Niger Delta region shall laugh last. We challenge them to stop at nothing to ensure that the section 162 subsection 2 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended) is deleted without hesitation.

    “It is unfortunate that as lawmakers representing various constituencies from the northern regions, rather than being conversant with political history and constitutional practice since independence, these lawmakers are embarking on a voyage which pathway is too thorny for them to navigate. Have they forgotten so soon the provisions of the 1963 Republican Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria on revenue sharing at a time the nation’s wealth depended mainly on groundnut pyramids, cotton, hide or skin, etc; the resources their forbears relied upon to build the northern economy? We wish to reproduce hereunder the provisions of section 139 of the 1963 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria for purposes of clarity and unbiased elucidation.

    “139. (1) Where under any Act of Parliament duty is levied in respect of the export from Nigeria of produce, hides or skins there, shall be paid by the Federation to each Region in respect of each quarter a sum equal to the appropriate percentage of the proceeds of that duty for that quarter.

    (2) For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section–

    1.(a) the proceeds for a quarter of a duty levied on a commodity shall be the amount remaining from such of the receipts from that duty as relate to exports of that commodity during that quarter after any drawbacks, refunds or other repayments relating to those receipts have been made or allowed for;

    2.(b) the appropriate percentage of the proceeds for a quarter of a duty levied on a commodity shall, in relation to any Region, be whichever of the following percentages is prescribed by Parliament in that behalf, that is to say, either- (i) the percentage of those proceeds that is attributable to exports of that commodity that were derived from that Region; (ii) the percentage of those proceeds that is attributable to exports of that commodity that were purchased in that Region;

    “The import of Section 139(1)and (2) is that one hundred per cent of the proceeds from the produce, hide or skin were paid to the producing regions after allowable expenses.

    “Similarly, Section 140 of the 1963 Constitution provided for fifty per cent of the proceeds from mining royalties and rents to be paid to the producing regions . We reproduce the relevant subsections hereunder for elucidation.

    140. (1) There shall be paid by the Federation to each Region a sum equal to fifty per cent of –

    1.(a) the proceeds of any royalty received by the Federation in respect of any minerals extracted in that Region; and

    2.(b) any mining rents derived by the Federation during that year from within that Region.

    (2) The Federation shall credit to the Distributable Pool Account a sum equal to thirty per cent.

    1.(a) the proceeds of any royalty received by the Federation in respect of minerals extracted in any Region; and

    2.(b) any mining rents derived by the Federation from within any Region.

    3.(3) For the purposes of this section the proceeds of a royalty shall be the amount remaining from the receipts of that royalty after any refunds or other repayments relating to those receipts have been deducted therefrom or allowed for.

    From the foregoing, it amounts to a display of bigotry for anybody to challenge the allocation of a paltry thirteen percent for the derivation principle to mineral producing states.

    Whereas the Nigerian state had at a time given a whopping one hundred per cent of proceeds from exports to the producing regions and only fifty per cent to other mineral producing states, we have maintained our repeated demand for the progressive increase of derivation percentage at least to what our forebears had practised in the past.

    We have continued to condone this arbitrary allocation of thirteen per cent to mineral producing states in the spirit of brotherhood and national interest over the years. Therefore to attempt to insult our sensibilities by sponsoring such an obnoxious and insensate bill is to say the least an invitation to chaos.

    Let us state in very clear terms that the feeding bottle mentality that has continued to rein our states, in which creativity and resourcefulness have been abandoned on the expectation of FAAC day in Abuja MUST STOP. Before the sponsored Bill is passed into law, the Ijaw nation shall take steps to protect and defend our oil and gas resources.

    If we must live together as one, we must strive to do those things that unite us and shun the ones that divide us; . rather than needlessly stoking the fire of discord, which is what the purported bill being sponsored by the 59 Honourable members, is all about.

    The 59 “honourable” northern brothers should allow sleeping dogs lie.

    See below copy of the Alteration Bill signed by 59 Reps: