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Southwest Pipeline Protection Contracts Should Go To Indigenous People, Pan-Yoruba Group Tells President Tinubu

FILE
October 25, 2023

The Oodua Nationalist Coalition (ONAC) said the people of the South West are disturbed that contracts for the protection of pipelines in the Ijawland were given to indigenous companies in the area while the protection of pipelines in the South West area had been given to companies not indigenous to the region.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has been asked to ensure the protection of petroleum pipelines in the South West is handled by an indigenous company or companies in the region.

The Oodua Nationalist Coalition (ONAC) said the people of the South West are disturbed that contracts for the protection of pipelines in the Ijawland were given to indigenous companies in the area while the protection of pipelines in the South West area had been given to companies not indigenous to the region.

"This decision has caused a lack of cooperation of indigenous people in the South West who feel sidelined by the award of pipeline protection in their indigenous territories to companies alien to them.

"Any pipeline protection in the South West should be handled by companies based and owned by people of the South West. This is equity based on common sense," the organisation said in a statement issued on Wednesday.

ONAC is a coalition of 45 pan-Yoruba groups.

In the statement signed by its Organising Secretary, Sunday Akinnuoye and Women Leader, Alahaja Munirat Ojuolape, the coalition commended the President for the renewal of the private pipeline protection mechanism.

The group however said the pipelines in the South West from Ondo to Lagos should be handled by a company owned by the people of the region.

ONAC said during the amnesty programme of the Federal Government, armed groups in Ilaje Yoruba territories handed over their weapons as a condition for peace and with the hope that the government would address their grievances.

The organisation, however, added that it regretted that the Ilaje Yoruba groups had been denied the opportunity given to their counterparts in the Niger Delta.

The group said that Ondo and Lagos are oil-rich states, noting that the former has the longest coastline in Nigeria.

"The people have voted for APC overwhelmingly since 2015. In the last election, Ondo State recorded the highest percentage of votes for President Tinubu. It is therefore embarrassing that the Federal Government does not consider any company worthwhile in the entire South West for pipeline protection in the vast territories.

"Security of pipelines can only best be handled by people indigenous to the area. Security is a local matter. The people of the South West cannot understand why the protection of pipelines in the region is not the responsibility of people who own the land where the pipelines pass through," the group said.

ONAC said there was no justification for giving out the protection of oil pipelines in the South West to people from other regions.

ONAC said the South West has a retinue of experts in the Niger Delta Coastline Vanguard (NDCV) who are competent enough to protect pipelines in the entire region, adding that it was high time the protection of pipelines went to indigenous companies in the area.

 "The pipelines in the Niger Delta are protected by people from that area. There is no justification for giving out pipeline protection in the South West to people from outside the region," ONAC said.

The group said it had to shelf its planned mass demonstration in key cities in the South West because it believed President Tinubu would listen to the concerns raised by the people.

"We see what goes on in the North where the Civilian Joint Task Force (JTF) has been set up. The members are local people who are indigenous to the areas of operation. Why should this be different in the case of the oil pipelines in the South West?" it asked.

ONAC said millions of youths in the South West are angry about the situation.

"Apart from the fact that the decision will not guarantee safety for the pipelines since the companies are considered by the people as alien to them, it has also robbed many Yoruba youths of the opportunity for jobs at a time of economic meltdown," it said.

The group said it would send petitions to the President and expected that the injustice would be promptly corrected.