Showing posts with label aviation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aviation. Show all posts

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 290707


Changing Tactics in the Niger Delta -- Analysis

Nigeria’s well endowed oil and gas basin, the Niger Delta, has been on the front burner of national and international discourse in recent years. The reason for this is not far-fetched.

For the country’s treasure trove, it has been a sordid tale of squalor, neglect and underdevelopment in the midst of wealth and plenty. Successive governments and the oil exploring multinational firms in the last five decades have only made half-hearted efforts to tackle the endemic and mind-boggling poverty in the region.

Courtesy of the Niger Delta, Nigeria today exports about 2.4 million barrels of crude oil per day; it is Africa’s biggest oil industry, the second largest exporter of oil to the United States, sixth oil producer in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and the 10th among oil producing countries in the world.

But this statistics appear insignificant against the backdrop of recent anarchic developments in the region, which resulted in the country losing at least $13 billion monthly on oil exports, besides cutting oil production by a quarter. In the last 18 months or so, several armed groups have emerged to lay claim to greater control of the region’s resources and revenue. Oil platforms and installations have often been attacked and destroyed by such groups, whose members usually abduct foreigners to draw attention to their demands.

Other criminal-minded groups have also joined the kidnapping fray. These insurgents have extended their nefarious acts beyond abduction of only foreigners to women and toddlers and in return demand huge ransom before the hostages are set free. At the moment, it is difficult to say whether such acts have anything to do with the so-called political or liberation struggle in the impoverished region.

Several pundits believe past attempts by the government to address the problem have been tokenistic and aggravated rather than resolve the issues. From the days of the river basin authorities to the defunct Oil Mineral Producing Areas Development Commission (OMPADEC) down to the subsisting Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), the problem had always been that of poor funding coupled with corruption and the lack of political will.

The government had also tinkered with the idea of stakeholders and consultative fora as well as setting up of committees, with the latest being the Niger Delta Peace and Conflict Resolution Committee that was established in June by the President Umaru Yar’Adua administration to chart a new way forward. Although the Senator David Brigidi-led committee is yet to show any discernible direction and focus, analysts are pessimistic whether it would be any different from past groupings, whose assignment came to naught at the end of the day. At least, it is foolhardy to continue to do the same thing the same way and expect a different result.

As stakeholders and the NDDC grapple with how to bring sustainable development to the region, the fact remains that the persistence of gross underdevelopment and the escalating violence are enough pointers that previous attempts at addressing the issue have been futile or have not given enough succour. To such pundits, there is need for a change of tactics on the part of government. The reasoning is that it is high time the Federal Government threw the Niger Delta challenge to private initiatives or policy institutions like the National Think-Tank, which had recently volunteered on its own to find answers to some of the lingering questions in the country, including the Niger Delta question.

National Think-Tank coordinator, Steve Azaiki, in a paper entitled: "Momentum for the Niger Delta", argues that there is no shortage of ideas on the way forward. According to him, there is a surfeit of proposals as various groups, individuals and stakeholders articulate their positions and proffer what they consider the appropriate template upon which to launch the region into a new and desirable era.

Some have even suggested a summit on the Niger Delta by the Federal Government. But the thinking among pundits is that such a forum organised by the government will be premature at this stage. The reason being that the government must move away from the habit of hurriedly getting on the driver’s seat without a dependable road map.

Even such a summit, by its conception, does not provide the best forum for brainstorming. How many days can a summit spare? A summit, more or less, is a rectifying forum where the final assent is given to a clean copy that was produced from all the hard labour of earlier negotiations, arguments and counter-arguments that had taken place usually before the summit.

However, the groundwork for a summit on the Niger Delta at this point ought to engage the attention of the National Think-Tank. Its membership, which is an amazing roll call of quality and diverse pool of talented Nigerians may never be readily available to a government-nominated committee that was charged with organising such a summit.

With the plethora of suggestions and multiplicity of stakeholders in the region, it only makes sense that a body like the National Think-Tank should distill and synthesise the various propositions, interact with stakeholders, research into the common denominators on the programme and projects to get the region on track. It should then be in position to present a working document; some invaluable intelligence will guide the preparation for the summit and implementation of the development of the agenda for the Niger Delta.

In Azaiki’s opinion, in rushing into a government-organised summit, especially on the Niger Delta, there is no way stakeholders will not raise as part of their demand the issues of resource control and fiscal federalism. But he says in granting such greater autonomy over resources and enthroning increased fiscal federalism are not matters of executive fiat.

These issues, he maintained, will have to be dealt with constitutionally. Besides, they are not matters that can be resolved in favour of the Niger Delta alone, as other constituent parts of the federation will, to a large extent, be affected by the decisions concerning such issues.

Other posers include: What is the best way to present or handle resources control and fiscal federalism issues at such a summit? What are the best ways of sensitising and winning over Niger Delta stakeholders, to realise the limitation of a summit or to pronounce authoritatively by way of a final solution on the vexed question of fiscal federalism? These and other salient matters are important for a think-tank to think through and present its recommendation on the best approach to maximise a summit on the Niger Delta.

But while the summit may engage in productively mapping out development strategies for the oil-producing region, it may find itself bogged down by the agitation for resource control, a situation that will command more headlines. Such scenario will send wrong signal and would heighten the propaganda that the Federal Government is unable to find answers to the needs of the peoples of the region. This may also lead to a fresh escalation of crisis in the creeks.

Azaiki, who is a former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) in Bayelsa State, believes Nigeria should strive to get away from the practice where the government is always at the forefront of everything no matter how genuinely concerned it may be. This is because in its haste to get things done or to be seen to be concerned, government misses out on the benefits that a more rigorous situation analysis and recommended course of action would provide.

For a lasting solution to the problems of the Niger Delta, let other actors, including stakeholders, brainstorm. Let them own the ideas, let them lay on the table what they need and what they would cherish. It is at this point that government as the trustee of the nation can step in to give its official seal of approval on what it can do either in the present or in the future, taking into consideration the vital interest of the other component groups in the nation.



Speaker's 70-Year-Old Mother Still Held Hostage -- Analysis (Vanguard)

*Bayelsa in frantic search for abducted septuagenarian mother of speaker

‘I cried and watched my aged mother being lowered into the boat and it disappeared into the night'

THE kidnap on Tuesday night of Mrs. Hansel Seibarugu, the mother of the Speaker of Bayelsa State House of Assembly, in the sleepy riverine settlement of Akaibiri in the Ekpetiama clan of Yenagoa Local Government Area has again brought to the fore the anarchy in the troubled Niger Delta.

Armed groups initially operating in the oil fields of the Niger Delta, demanding a greater share of political rights and revenues for their polluted and impoverished region, resorted to kidnapping expatriates to draw attention to the blighted region and have burgeoned into several splinter bodies some of which have degenerated to money making machines. But the availability of arms as well as growth in the number of criminal gangs and the involvement of some powerful local politicians during last April elections has also helped to stoke this alien culture of violence in the once peaceful region.

For those not conversant with the beautiful but underdeveloped rural riverine settlement of Ekpetiama, one of the host communities to the multi billion naira Ubie Gas Gathering Project, being undertaking by oil major, Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), it is a long stretch of marshy land on the bank of the Nun River that snakes through the state capital. It is an area that could be accessed both by land and river while most of the communities can only be reached by boat during this period of the year (flood season).

Interestingly, the natives, many of whom reside in the big cities across the country, love returning to their ancestral home to spend their vacation because of its serene and natural surroundings believed to be a soothing balm to the hassles associated with life in the city.

However, Tuesday night abduction of 70 year old Mrs Hansel, fondly called “Mama Yenagoa” has not only shattered this myth but has also brought to the fore the frightening dimension youth activism has assumed in the troubled oil rich Delta where armed gunmen now prey on toddlers and parents of public office holders for monetary gains. It is still not clear what led to the abduction of the septuagenarian woman whose only crime is giving birth to a son who turned out to be the speaker of the state House of Assembly. But an eyewitness, Mr. Tuanake Nimitei, told Sunday Vanguard, who visited the community shortly after the news of the kidnap filtered into Yenagoa, that some strange faces were noticed ostensibly on reconnaissance about four days before the victim was whisked away.

Wary of their movement, he claimed to have challenged one of the strangers who told him they were fuel dealers in search of potential market. The strangers, he added, turned out to be the invaders who whisked away the aged woman in their speedboats without any resistance from the villagers many of whom had travelled to a neighbouring community for a social function.

The younger sister of the speaker, identified as Powei Sam, who was with her aged mother when the gunmen struck, recalled with pain how she was kidnapped.

Sitting in front of their cream coloured apartment which stood out from other buildings in the community, the visibly lady, fighting tears from dropping from her swollen eyes, recounted how she and her mother were seated at her shop located by the bank of the Nun River when four boys walked up to them and requested to buy liquor ‘Chelsea’.

The mother, she noted, had made it a habit to spend her time at the shop as a form of exercise. “As I was about attending to them, two of the youths grabbed mama and immediately dashed to the water front where a speed boat occupied by two others was already steaming waiting for those that came for my mother,” she said, adding that her shout for help was of no consequence as most of the youths who could have come to her rescue had gone to town to attend a social function.

“I cried and watched my aged mother being lowered into the boat and it disappeared into the night,” she lamented. Sympathizers, especially women who thronged the kidnapped woman’s home, were heartbroken, saying, “we want mama back, because she is sick.”

A youth who simply identified himself as Ebiowei told Sunday Vanguard that the operation could have been averted had the speaker taken seriously information allegedly leaked to him shortly on his arrival from London, last week, that plans were afoot to kidnap his mother. He said though the speaker had planned to relocate his mother to Yenagoa on getting the information, nobody knew why he changed his mind before jetting out to South Africa.

Also an eyewitness said he was at the river taking his bath when the gunmen struck but that there was nothing he could do because the invaders were heavily armed, stressing that they even released volley of shots in the air to warn any likely intruder before they disappeared into the night.

Similarly, the deputy Amananaowei of Akaibiri town, Chief Mekwe Nimitei, said he had retired to his bed after the day’s job only to be jolted from his deep sleep by the distress cry of the people. The royal father who spoke in his native Ijaw dialect said the kidnappers were already gone when he came out.

With the invaders gone, he said he had no choice but to mobilize his fellow chiefs and community leaders to contact the Joint Task Force and police in Yenagoa. The foremost militant group in the region, Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND), in a swift reaction, distanced its members from the act, which it linked to what it called internal politics with no connection with the genuine Ijaw struggle for self-determination and resource control.

The group in an online reaction signed by its spokesman, Jomo Gbomo, said, “We were not involved in such a despicable act. The abductions are undoubtedly related to local politics and the government should rather look inwards for the perpetrators or masterminds of this crime.”

Meanwhile, Speaker Werinipre Seibarugu, who was away in South Africa for a parliamentary conference when his mother’s abduction took place, has cut short his stay to return to Yenagoa to join in effort to secure the release of the victim whose whereabouts remained unknown even as his immediate family has moved out of the Legislative Quarters home in Ekeki, Yenagoa. Also, fierce looking mobile police men have taken over security activities at the quarters with only residents allowed into the premises. Confirming the incident, the state commissioner of police, Mr. Julian Opalaeke, said about six heavily armed youths carried out the attack between 8 and 9p.m. He said a suspect had been arrested and was helping the command in its investigation.

Reacting to the incident, Governor Timipre Sylva vowed to purge
the state of criminal elements, which he said were damaging the state economy as well as the sense of security of people doing business there. As at the time of filing this report, no contact had been established with the kidnappers which is coming barely five days after the state assembly through its chairman committee on information, culture and media, Hon. Robert Enogha, denied initiating moves to impeach Seibarugu and the state deputy governor, Mr. Peremobowei Ebebi. Ebebi and the speaker were until a few days ago at the centre storm of an impeachment saga rocking the state.

It was gathered that some youths sympathetic to Seibarugu travelled, weekend, to an undisclosed community in southern Ijaw notorious for hostage taking and other related vices where they alleged the aged woman was being held captive by the kidnappers.
Contacted, special assistant to the speaker on media, Mr. Jonah Okah, said the family and the police were still waiting to get word from the kidnappers.

On the whereabouts of the speaker’s wife, Okah said, “Mrs. Seibarugu has just been delivered of a baby, and should be left out of the current problem.” He expressed optimism that the old woman would be released soon as, according to him,” she is innocent and has not done anything to deserve what she is presently passing through.”
Police spokesman, Mr. Iniobong Ikpokette in a telephone chat on Friday, said the command was yet to trace the whereabouts of the kidnapped victim.


Rivers State Bloody Week in Review (Sunday Vanguard)

*Gunmen shoot American Prof., kill commissioner’s brother, oil worker

WILL abduction, shooting, cult related violence and killings ever stop in Rivers State? This is the question on many lips. Many had thought that with the raising of a peace and rehabilitation committee by the state government to reach out to militants and cultists in the state, peace would have started returning to the area. But this much sought after peace is appearing to be a mirage or perhaps it is only a matter of time for it to reign. Within the last two weeks several persons have been killed with many sustaining gun shot wounds.

The most recent victim of the sad state was an American professor, Michael Watt, who was reportedly attacked at the office of a new tabloid, National Point, in Orominike street, D line in Port Harcourt. He was allegedly to have been trailed from a bank on Olu Obasanjo Road where he had gone to withdraw money but was told to come back later.

A staff of the tabloid told Sunday Vanguard he was there to receive an award. Shortly after he stepped into the office, the gun men, about eight of them appeared from the blues, ordering him to produce the money he had gone to withdraw from the bank before coming there.

It was like a dream to the professor, according to an eye witness. He however pulled out the six hundred dollars he had on him. But the dare devil militants or robbers thought he was joking and immediately shot him on the right arm. Perhaps for him to know they were serious and not in a Hollywood session.

When it however dawned on them that the six hundred dollars was the only cash the man had on him; in their frustration they, reportedly, smashed the computers in the office and then thoroughly ransacked the place for anything of value. Before fleeing they allegedly shot a guard attached to the newspaper for making effort to deny them entry initially.

Both victims were later rushed to a nearby hospital. Sunday Vanguard later gathered that the professor who was researching on the Niger Delta was badly wounded on the fingers. None of the hospital staff was ready to comment on his health condition when Sunday Vanguard visited the place.

This sad incident came barely twenty four hours after a newly sworn- in commissioner for energy and natural resources, Eldred Billy Braide, cheated death in the hands of suspected assassins and cultists. But his brother, Ipaly Braide and one other were not lucky as they were felled by the bullets of the assailants. Narrating how it happened to the Sunday Vanguard, a family source said minutes after the commissioner was sworn in at a colorful ceremony in Brick House, last Monday, himself and his wife, political admirers, friends and family members retired to a guest house in Amadi flat area of the state capital for a brief reception put together for him by some of his friends and associates.

When they finished there, they moved to his family compound in Lomumba Street for another get together. It was there the gun men struck. The sources said that residents of the street started noticing some strange youths parading the area on motor bikes after the second leg of the party started. But before they could put their fingers on what was to happen, one of the youths came down from his bike and started shooting into the crowd. Many ran but the killers chased them.

They reportedly caught up with the commissioner’s brother, said to be slightly above forty years and shot him at close range and he allegedly died on the spot. Several others sustained bullet wounds. One of them later died at the hospital.
Confirming the sad news, the state commissioner of police, Mr. Felix Ogbaudu, linked it to political rivalry.

Meanwhile, on that same day, an oil worker simply described as Elder Echendu was shot dead at Ede street in Ogbunabali area of the state capital. Sources said he was driving into his house when gun men caught up with him and immediately opened fire, killing him on the spot. Their intention was not clear at press time. But some people in the area feared it was a case of mistaken identity.

It would be recalled that, two weeks ago, a Lebanese was also shot
dead in the same neighborhood. Sources said he was attacked at about midnight. The state police commissioner said the police were not ruling out failed abduction, robbery or even assassination in his case.

The Lebanese according to those in Ogbonde street said he had been doing his furniture business in the area for decades.” We cannot understand why anybody will want to kill him. He had been doing his furniture business in this area for years. He was almost a Nigerian to many of us”, some of his neighbors lamented.

Coming after his experience was the case of two persons who were shot dead on their way from a bank in the state capital. Sources said the gun men trailed them on a motor bike up to Elekahia before opening fire on them. It could not be confirmed if they dispossessed them of any valuable.

Robbers, Sunday Vanguard learnt, now position themselves in front of banks in Port Harcourt waiting for those that go in to make huge withdrawals. But how they manage to know these people is still a mystery to many. Could it be that they have links within the banks? They wait for their victims to come out, trail them to quiet spots and then threaten to shoot them if they don’t hand over the cash.

The security situation has become alarming in many parts of the state. The caretaker committee chairman of Asari Toru Local Government Area, Mr. Ibaninabo Hamilton Dawarey, last week, reportedly, ordered a curfew in the headquarters of his local government after two rival cult groups clashed in Buguma last Sunday leaving one dead.

Governor Celestine Omehia is deeply worried by the sad situation. This prompted his constitution of a peace and rehabilitation committee to persuade these cultists and militants to drop the nefarious acts. The committee headed by Alhaji Hassan Douglass is expected to begin tour of the twenty three local government areas of the state to pursue peace.

It is the prayer of all that peace returns to the state. Already night life has disappeared from the state capital. As early as 6.30 p.m., most residents start racing home for fear of their lives. So the people truly desire peace.


NCAA Threatens to Degrade Airports (This Day)

The Director-General of the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), Dr Harold Demuren has said the authority will degrade any airport that does not meet certain requirements, noting that some of the airports suffer from infrastructural decay and may not be cleared for certification until they are rehabilitated.

Demuren who addressed journalists at the Murtala Mohammed Airport, Lagos at the weekend said that the five international airports in Lagos, Abuja, Kano, Port Harcourt and Calabar must meet international standards before they will be cleared for International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) certification, which will take place in September.

He decried the lack of basic facilities in some of the airports and regretted that the Nigeria Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) is saddled with too many airports and therefore face daunting challenge to maintain them.

"NCAA will degrade the airports that did not meet the expected standard. FAAN is saddled with so many airports. We cannot accept such decay in our airports. They must meet certain standards so that they will serve the Nigerian public effectively. We must not compromise standards."

On the issue of safety, Demuren said that bad weather was involved in all the accidents that had taken place in Nigeria and cautioned that pilots must wait for bad weather to clear before they operate their flight.

He noted that Nigeria and other countries in Africa are located around tropical revolving thunderstorm, adding that the Gulf of Guinea where Nigeria is located is very stormy.

The NCAA boss disclosed that as part of updating both operators and passengers, weather information will soon be made available at arrival halls of Nigerian airports, stressing that the problem of weather is all over the world.

"All accidents that took place in Nigeria happened in bad weather. Pilots must wait for bad weather to clear before they operate. Nigeria is located in the area of tropical thunderstorm in the gulf of Guinea, but very soon we will begin to show weather reports in arrival halls of the airports."

Demuren revealed that Nigeria has been making progress in the aviation sector, stating that the country must become category 1 compliant so that Nigerians who wish to travel to United States must not go through Europe before going to America but take a direct flight to US.

He said that if the country becomes category 1 compliant it is Nigerian carriers that will benefit because they can now fly to US, which is a very lucrative route.

Besides, the category 1 certification will declare Nigeria's airspace safe and this will boost the nation's economy, noting that within three weeks America's Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) will reply NCAA with its report, which will prompt the authority to start a programme for a more comprehensive assessment by FAA.

The Director-General also noted that it was because the country passed the ICAO audit opened opportunity for Nigerians carriers through the Cape Town Convention and could lease modern aircraft which have boosted the airlines fleet, that in the major routes of Abuja, Lagos and Port Harcourt one could only see modern aircraft, unlike in the past when old airplanes dotted the nation's skyline.

"About 18 months ago we lost the confidence of the flying public after the two accidents. Nigeria must be category 1 compliant. Things have changed since now. We have relatively new aircraft. We have safe tower project and Nigeria stands a better chance today for investors to come in and do business."


Collapsed Lagos - Badagry Road Causing Strife (Vanguard)

THE collapse of the Lagos -Badagry Expressway has crippled economic activities of many Nigerians who ply the route to their business areas as man-hours are lost endlessly in traffic. The development is provoking angst as it is drawing flakes of both Nigerians and non-Nigerians. Daily, commuters are held in grueling traffic almost endlessly, mainly due to potholes and craters which have since combined to reduce the road to a death trap, forcing vehicles to snarl, while valuable time is lost. On both sides of the road, Sunday Vanguard could count 115 pot holes and 15 craters, between Mile 2 and Okokomaiko.

The points where the holes are common place are First Gate, Agboju, Oluti, Alakija, Mazamaza, Mile 2, Abule Ado, Under Bridge (Trade Fair), Volks, Iyana Iba and Okokomaiko. Added to the woe of commuters on this route is activities of the men of the underworld, who take advantage of the ugly situation and unleash terror. The traffic caused by the collapsed road is being compounded by flood since the rain started .

Consequently, the profile of victims of robbers on the route has been rising. The situation, Sunday Vanguard Business checks reveal, is already taking its toll on trade between Nigeria and neighbouring West African countries, because the route is the major link Nigeria has with these countries like Ghana, Togo, Benin Republic. Following collapsed sections of the road, operators of transport service and traders from Lagos to other cities on the West Coast spend hours from Lagos to Badagry and Seme border for a journey that should not take more than one our.

As a result, transport operators have jerked up their fares, even as the road users count their loses. Our reporters observed last week, many of the commercial transport operators on the Nigeria, Cotonu (Benin Republic) and other West coast route from their base in Mile 2, in Lagos under the aegis of International Transport Association identifying primarily, bad road networks, as one of the major obstacles impeding free flow of traffic. Chairman of the international transport union, Alhaji Abdelrahem Jimoh, who spoke to our reporter, at their Mile 2 garage lamented seriously the effect of the bad road on the Nigerian economy in terms of loses.

Jimoh said that in addition, this ugly situation and adverse negative effect it has brought the nation’s economy, a journey which ought to have taken a passenger less than two hours now takes about four hours. Speaking further, he blamed the governments for not taken their responsibilities serious, quarrying that all the big talks about developing trans boarder working transport system only ends in government papers without actions .

He noted that if the present government is serious in this matter, it must immediately play its role by ensuring that as from today the issue of this international roads will be addressed and made motor able, as this will not only increase business among Nigerians and other people, but it will also help in saving the lives and properties of innocent citizens from further loss of lives to this bad road

“Can you imagine the number of innocent people who have lost their lives on this road, why we are saying this is that it is a problem that cannot be swept aside. Another thing is that sometimes robbers exploit this situation to unleash terror on transporters and passengers. Because we cannot say who will be the next victim, either you or me. Please our urgent call is to tell the present government as transporters to help Nigerians and people of other West African nations in putting this road well. It will help all of us, but above all, it will also help boost the Nigerian economy which all of us are working for.”




Sunday, July 22, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 220707


Air Tragedy Averted at Lagos Airport (This Day)

Tragedy was averted yesterday at about 10.55am when a Virgin Nigeria aircraft with registration number, VK 44 that was landing at the Murtala Mohammed Airport, Lagos, from Abuja almost collided with another aircraft that was taking off a few meters from the runway.

Passengers in the in-coming flight, including the pilot agreed that the near-collision was too close. The passengers agreed that the tragedy was averted due to the dexterity of the pilot of the Lagos-bound flight who was quick to notice the aircraft that was taking off, and immediately gained altitude until it stabilised in the air, and landed after another 10 minutes.

Among the passengers on the flight were World Bank officials who were coming to Lagos for a meeting, senators, businessmen and women and other Nigerians and foreign nationals.

Senator Ganiyu Olarenwaju Solomon of Lagos West Senatorial District who was on board of the Lagos-bound flight said it was the pilot who saved the situation, as the aircraft had less than a minute to touch the runway when the pilot sighted the other aircraft that was taking off.

"My God, it was very close. The pilot had told us that he was landing. He directed the crew to prepare for landing. We could see everywhere the grasses before the runway. Then all of a sudden, the plane took off again because as he was trying to land another aircraft was taking off," he said.

The Senator said when the aircraft stabilised in the air, the pilot explained to the passengers what happened and apologised for taking their time, noting that the two aircraft were very close.

Solomon, who was yet to shake off the shock of what happened, observed that the aircraft had to gather more energy to reverse its course because it had already prepared for landing and needed renewed velocity and resurgence to gain altitude again, describing the situation as "a very, very close shave."

Director of Communications, Virgin Nigeria Airways, Larry Agose, confirmed the incident and explained that the flight was about to land and when the pilot noticed that another aircraft was taking off, it gained altitude again to make way for that aircraft. He added that the aircraft that was taking off was not Virgin Nigeria's airplane.

Agose explained that the pilot merely took precautionary measures, noting that such incidents happen all over the world, advising that it is not necessary to magnify it.

The Managing Director of Nigeria Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Capt. Ado Sanusi, said the pilot that took off again into the air was observing normal safety procedures, which every pilot is acquainted with, noting that a pilot can abort take-off or landing, depending on the signals he receives.

Sanusi also explained that this happens in all the airports in the world, adding that passengers who don't know about this usually panic when they observe it happen, stressing that publishing such in the media may create fear in the flying public.

Reacting to the allegation that the near-collision may be due to the closure of one of the two runways which has been undergoing repairs, the General Manager, Public Affairs, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mr. Akin Olukunle, said the cause of the incident should not be attributed to the runway. He noted that FAAN does not want to join issues with NAMA and urged the agency to work on its radar, adding that air traffic controllers seemed to be under pressure and therefore may be making mistakes when monitoring and directing aircraft movement.


Peace Summit Efforts Intensified (This Day)

The Presidency at the weekend, literally relocated to Lagos as President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua and Vice President Goodluck Jonathan visited the former federal capital in pursuit of peace in Niger Delta region and economic co-operation between two neighbouring South western states controlled by different political parties.

While President Yar'Adua met with Governors Gbenga Daniel and Babatunde Fashola of Ogun and Lagos States at Dodan barracks, Lagos, Jonathan used the visit to hold parleys with several groups from the Niger Delta areas, who came to Lagos from the Creeks.

Yar’Adua also met with former President Olusegun Obasanjo at the same venue.

THISDAY gathered that Jonathan's visit to Lagos was in connection with the proposed summit on Niger Delta being planned by the presidency.

The summit aimed at bringing together all stakeholders in the oil-rich region to discuss solutions to the crisis was scheduled for last month in Abuja. The summit was later postponed to give room for wider consultations.

A source close to the Presidency said Jonathan had been involved in "cross-sectional and multi-layer consultative meetings with all groups, both militant and moderate, radicals and conservative, peoples movements and tradtional institutions".

The source further said that the wide consultations have enabled the presidency to extract commitments from the stakeholders.

It is expected that the next step of the preparation would be to formulate the specifics of the summit itself.

"The next step after the series of consultation is to get effective representation that will mirror the ethnic groupings and ideological persuasions of the various people.

"We will then move to the level of confidence building projects which are intended to show that the administration is serious in its efforts to resolve the crisis in the Niger Delta. These projects will be targeted at job creation, ensure security and also bring development to the communities in the area," he said.

Another top official involved in the preparation for the summit said government is also determined to isolate the "criminal elements that have attempted to hijack the genuine struggle of the people of the Niger Delta".

The conference proper is expected to be facilitated by credible Nigerians, which all the stakeholders can trust. The Niger Delta issue is one of the seven-point agenda which President Yar'Adua set as priorities for his administration.

President Yar'Adua's meeting yesterday with Daniel and Fashola deliberated on the proposed Lagos mega-city to be established between Ogun and Lagos States. It was conceived by the Obasanjo administration which appointed Prof. Akin Mabogunje as the chairman of the implementation committee.

The project will include residential and industrial estates as well as a free trade/export processing zone. It is expected to create economic co-operation between the two states with the Federal Government as a major muscle behind it.

Obviously mindful of the different political affiliations of Daniel, who belongs to Yar'Adua's Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Fashola's Action Congress (AC), the President came to Lagos with a bi-partisan message for the two state chief executives.

According to sources, the President's discussion with the governors centred on how to get the project off the ground with minimum hitches.

THISDAY also learnt that President Yar'Adua held a secret parley with his predecessor, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo.

The meeting reviewed developments on state and PDP affairs, particularly those arising from actions of the Obasanjo administration, which were inherited by the new government.


Another Chief's Son Kidnapped

AGAIN, suspected militants have struck in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, kidnapping the son of a prominent Eleme community chief, Prince Awala Nta-Oluka, who is said to be in his late thirties.

Four men reportedly abducted the chief's son from his residence at Eleme yesterday evening, thus shattering the lull in kidnapping of single individuals particularly children.

In the past weeks, militants, who demanded ransoms from victims' parents, abducted two three-year-olds, who were later freed after widespread condemnation and pleas from individuals and groups, including President Musa Yar'Adua.

The Rivers State Police Command spokesperson, Mrs. Ireju Barasua, told The Guardian last night that the gunmen abducted the chief's son from his residence at Eleme.

Barasua said the Police were still investigating the matter to ascertain the motive for the abduction.

But sources in Eleme revealed that the abduction of the chief's son might be connected with the staunch anti-terrorism campaign he had organised with the Eleme Petrochemical Company some of which workers were kidnapped recently.

However, no group had claimed responsibility for the abduction as at press time.





Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 170707



Two American Carriers Add Nigeria Routes

TWO American airlines are set to commence operations on lucrative Nigeria - United States routes.

The visiting four-member team from the United States Federal Aviation Administration that arrived on Sunday for the initial technical assessment of the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority and three Nigerian carriers, said this in Lagos on Monday.

The leader of the team, Greg Michael, who spoke with our correspondent on Monday in Lagos, said that Delta Airlines and Continental Airlines would begin services into the country, after meeting all the requirements of the Nigerian aviation regulatory bodies.

Michael said that the team was pleased that the NCAA had worked very hard to make the airspace safe.

The commencement of flight operations by the two carriers will bring to three, the number of American airlines operating into Nigeria.

North American Airlines started operations into Nigeria, July last year under the ‘Open Skies’ Agreement between Nigeria and the US Airlines, with Nigeria designating three carriers, Bellview, Arik and Virgin Nigeria to fly to America.

Delta Airlines is a US-based airline headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. It operates a large domestic and international network that spans North America, South America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East and the Caribbean.

Delta Airlines currently flies to 463 destinations in 95 countries.

The Director-General, NCAA, Dr. Harold Demuren was confident that after the successful passing of the International Air Safety Assessment for the category one audit, Nigerian carriers would fly seamlessly to the US, from Lagos.

Demuren said, “This is the initial assessment of that, initial review if you like. We are happy that they are here. They will still come back to do the theory aspect, so that Nigeria can pass and be certified.




Asari Calls for Trial of Obasanjo

HEAD of the Niger Delta Volunteer Force (NDVF), Alhaji Mujaheed Dokubo-Asari, has said that the Niger Delta will not witness peace until former President Olusegun Obasanjo is tried in the International Court of Justice for crimes against humanity.

He maintained that a sovereign national conference was also needed to be convened by President Umaru Yar’Adua to discuss how justice would be done to the people of the area by the Federal Government.

Dokubo-Asari, while speaking with journalists in Ibadan on Monday at the burial of one of his guardians, said the former president’s eight-year tenure was characterised by injustice which he said demanded prosecution.

He disclosed that he had instituted a legal action against the former president for the alleged injustice meted out to him and for depriving him of his fundamental human rights.

He claimed that Chief Obasanjo did not have respect for the rule of law and humanity, this he said made him to deprive people of their fundamental human rights.

According to him, “a lot of people were murdered. He destroyed Odi and other communities, where he killed many people. There was no security of lives and property in all parts of the country, even in Ibadan here, nobody can move out freely.

“He facilitated crisis in the town. He took power from a democratically elected president and installed a stooge. He is a devil, he must be tried at the International Court of Justice and I can assure you that he will surely face the trial.”

The NDVF chieftain said, “I will not rest the struggle until Obasanjo is brought to book. He has committed crimes against humanity. A lot of people were killed during his tenure, but we shall let him know that he is not above God.”

Speaking on his detention which he said was just a mere threat to stop his fight against injustice, Dokubo-Asari said that though “it was a bad one, experienced in a positive way.”

According to him, “it was just a threat. That will not stop me from the struggle. The struggle has just begun. We shall not stop it until our prayers are answered in Ijaw land.

“Our land has been taken over. We are deprived of our rights in Ijaw land and in the entire Niger Delta. We must be liberated from the economic shambles, oppression and poverty,” he said.

Asked if the people had any hope in the Vice President Goodluck Jonathan as a saviour to fight for the cause of the land, Dokubo-Asari said: “He may try, but a tree does not make a forest. I don’t think that he can solve the problem alone,” he said.

A sovereign national government, he suggested, would provide a lasting solution to the crisis.

He maintained that such a conference should not be politically motivated, but should comprise various groups from all the Nigerian nations to discuss the sources of problems ravaging the country.

Speaking on kidnappings, especially of toddlers, in the area, he described them as “heinous acts that are evil and criminal in nature.”

According to him, “kidnapping is evil and nefarious. It is a sin against humanity which should be condemned by the entire Nigerians.”

He called on President Yar’Adua to ensure that the “sovereign national conference is convened to bring justice, equity, peace and tranquility to the country."


Dreams of Biafra Still Alive

The wife of Nigerian secessionist leader Ralph Uwazuruike says she is still committed to his cause, even though he has spent two years in jail.
"The struggle continues - it is not negotiable," Ngozi Uwazuruike told the BBC about the desire for independence for the south-eastern Igbo people.

Mr Uwazuruike's treason trial is due to resume on Monday in Abuja.

Mrs Uwazuruike, however, said the children had been affected by not seeing their father for two years.

"Our four children are out of school now and they miss their father," she told the BBC's Network Africa programme.

Mr Uwazuruike was arrested in October 2005 and has been in detention since then.

"The little one is emotionally sick now," Mrs Uwazuruike said.

"He needs to see his father. But I don't know how I could possibly take that little boy to prison to see his father."

The Movement for Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (Massob) says 37 years after the Biafran civil war ended, the Igbo people are still "marginalised" in Nigeria.

"We are not wanted," Mrs Uwazuruike said.

Recently, former Biafran leader, Emeka Ojukwu said the Igbo have more reason today to seek independence from Nigeria.

Mr Ojukwu's declaration of independence on 30 May 1967 led to a three-year civil war, in which more than 1m people died, mostly from hunger.

Mr Uwazuruike, a lawyer, abandoned his law practice to take up the Biafran campaign.


New Trend in Nigeria's Most Lucrative Illicit Industry (Daily Champion)

Michael Stewart was the first, Margret Hill, second and now it is Samuel Amadi all minors who have had a taste of the kidnap experience.

Michael Stewart is the son of a female house of assembly lawmaker, Margaret Hill, a daughter of a Briton and Samuel, a prince.


What makes their abduction unique is that the three took place as the children were being taken to school respectively.

Another unifying factor is that their cases have only sharpened a sudden developing trend of child abduction in the volatile Niger Delta Region.

The most recent of them which calls for a lot of concern in the child abduction cases is that of Samuel Ovundah Amadi which happened barely four days after the release of Margaret Hill.

According to the driver of the Chief, identified as Knneth Akobezuko, the event took place at the East-West road at about 7am.

The act, he said was perpetrated by four armed men.

"I was taking the boy to school as I usually do. Then some people used a Volvo car to block me.; four of them carrying guns. All of a sudden, I heard a big sound on the glass door beside me.

I thought it was a gunshot because one of them had entered and pointed a gun at my head.

"After two of them had entered into the vehicle with me, they told me to drive on towards University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT). The brown volvo car was following me.

When we got to a bushy place, they took the boy and told me that I should go. They collected my phone so I could not make any call. So I came back here," he said.

Not long, the abductors called the Iriebe community chief, Francis Amadi.

According to him, they demanded N50 million ransom. He was also told to pay the said amount into a First Inland bank account with name, Dyke Otuonye and account number 301450821801.

Later the kidnappers called to say he should not pay the money into any account rather he should stack it in N1000 denominations and wait for further instructions.

According to Amadi, he tried negotiating with them adding saying that he told then he could pay only N5 million. The chief who is from Iriebe community. Obiakpor Local Government Area suspecting foul play in the accused his driven Kenneth of complicity.

Not long after, the abductors called Chief Amadi again saying that his driver was not involved in the abduction, when the local chief wanted to ascertain the driver's innocence in the kidnap. They also added that if Amadi did not heed to their instruction, they would chop off Samuel's hands and send to him in an envelope.

As the conversation was going on, a neighbour and Computer Science student, in Rivers State University (RSUST), Innocent Onokure eavesdropped into the conversation and it seemed to him that he recognized the voice of one of kidnappers speaking.

He alerted the traditional chief and when they called his friends number, he said he was in Lagos. Not satisfied with what was , Chief Amadi stated that he called in men of the police force to arrest the duo. His reason for arresting Onokure is that he had not seen him for over one year now and why must he come back to his village after over a year on a day his child was kidnapped.

Rivers State police spokesperson Ireju Barasu who confirmed the abduction said that the kidnappers have been in contact with the family of the boy.

At the end of the day, boy Samuel was released to his father. Though it is not clear how much was paid as ransome, it is an open secrete that ransom is paid for every kidnap though the family of the person will not disclose it.

The Obiakpor Local Government Area Chief confirmed the release of his son adding that he has since taken him to the hospital for medical examination.

Recall that this was exactly what happened in the case of baby Margaret and had also attracted a lot of attention.

For the mother of three, the experience was simply a nightmare.

Even the governor of the Rivers State, Sir Celestine Omehia did not mince words in condemning the act.

"What has happened is very unfortunate, criminal, inhuman and evil and we shall not tolerate it any more. We are no longer going to tolerate this type of criminal action." he said at the Government House, Port Harcourt when he received, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Oluchi Hill, parents of the three-year-old British girl that was abducted on Thursday, July 5,2007 on her way to school.

Hostage taking, kidnapping or abduction is now a daily occurrence in Rivers State and every other area of the Niger Delta region. Before now, it was limited to Bayelsa, Delta and Rivers states but now every part of the region has one tale of kidnapping or the other to tell.

Miss Margaret Hill was being taken to to school in the morning of Thursday, July 5 when some yet to be identified gunmen smashed the passenger's side of the vehicle she was traveling in and snatched her to a yet to be disclosed hideout.


Margaret was released after four days due to an international outcry and pressure particularly put on the Nigerian government to secure her safe release by her home country, the British Government.

A week before Margaret was abducted, Master Micheal Stewart, a son of a member of the Rivers State House of Assembly was abducted by gunmen on Tuesday June 26 within his school premises when her nanny was taking him to his classroom few minutes after he alighted from the vehicle that brought him to school. Stewart is about three and a half years. He was released few days later after the family allegedly paid a ransom of N10 million. A news agency quoted Oluchi Hill as saying that her daughter kidnappers were ready to free the girl but had asked for an undisclosed amount as ransom.

Though security agents and government officials claimed that both Margaret and Stewart were released unconditionally without any payment of ransom. As the saying goes they can tell that to the Marines.

A day before Miss Hill was abducted, five expatriates working for Lone Star Drilling Nigeria, an oil servicing company working for Shell Development Company in the Soku oil field in Kalabari Kingdom of Rivers State were taken hostage by some unidentified gunmen who are yet to claim responsibility or state their demands.

Even Omehia has had a taste of the agony of kidnap victims' families. Few days after he was elected governor, his mother was taken hostage.

Alluding to this incident, Omehia empathized with the Hills thus: "I know how you feel since your daughter was taken some days ago and we share your agony. The government and people of Rivers State are with you in these agonizing moments of your life and we pray that it comes to an end soon."

Condemnation for the abduction of baby Hill came from far and wide even the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta [MEND] a militant group was irked by the abduction of Margaret and announced its decision to fish out the culprits and ensure safe release of the child. Nsirimovo lamented that the current trend of kidnapping is nothing short of a disastrous development in the region.

Condemning the kidnapping of children,Nsirimovu called on all those who have profited from kidnapping to recognize that this senseless industry cannot continue. Atake Tom, leader of the Niger Delta Vigilante Movement directed the immediate stoppage of all forms of kidnapping and hostage taking in RIVERS STATE. Ateke appealed to youths and youth groups in the state to sheate their sword.

Inspector general of Police, Mr. Mike Okiro on his part declared that those involved in hostage takings and other anti social activities in the Niger Delta should be regarded as criminals and treated as such. Okiro who disclosed that some of these criminals are non-indigenes of Niger Delta, declared that they are doing it for their selfish interest.

Some years back hostage taking was alien to the Niger Delta Region. It was a taboo among the people and can lead to communal or tribal war. While in some communities' culprits of this act and their families could be banished from their community as a punishment for abduction. Hostage taking was only tolerated during war or during the various boundary clashes among communities in the region. But times have change and things are no longer at ease.

Hostage taking took a center stage in the region when some groups resorted to it as a means of drawing attention to the plight of the robbed, neglected, oppressed and marginalized people of the oil rich Niger Delta who live on the bank of a river but wash their hand with spittle. Hostage taking was seen as a legitimate weapon that could be used in the struggle for the control of its oil and gas resources and emancipation of the region from an oppressive Nigerian Government.

Kidnapping in the region took a new dimension when the leader of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunterer Force, Alhaji Mujihad Dokubo Asari was arrested for alleged acts of treason. Most of the groups involved in hostage taking were claiming that they were doing this to press home their demand for the unconditional released of Asari. But last month Asari was given bail by a Federal High Court in Abuja. Regrettably, kidnapping has not abated. Infact, Asari himself is a victim of the criminal agents who now parade their region as freedom fighters: an SUV van belonging to his was snatched a fortnight ago at gunpoint. Speaking at a stakeholders meting in Port Harcourt, Omehia lamented "The truth is that kidnapping has become business and no more a fight for the emancipation of the NIGER Delta."

Though some schools of thought believe that kidnapping gangs proliferated when Asari was in detention and would reduce when he is free, the reverse has been the case. Even Asari wife, Alhaja Mujuhadeet held the opinion that the release of her husband would reduce hostage taking. Some are of the opinion the rising wave of kidnapping is to show that Asari is not really in charge of the entire so-called militant group in the region. Some of these groups and their various sponsors are angling to get the kind of relevance and attention that Asari receives from both the federal government of Nigeria and the international community. Asari has admitted that he has no control over the criminal gangs operating in the region and his release may not be an immediate antidote to kidnapping in violence in the Niger Delta.

A wise man once said that wherever there is original there must be a counterfeit. Though there are genuine groups in the region that are agitating for improvement of the welfare of the region others have latched to this struggle to perpetuate crime and violence. Some people claimed that some of these criminal elements were originally part of the Niger struggle but greed overwhelmed their "patriotic" view and they decided to help themselves. Having been identified with the struggle the boys decided to go into hostage taking, bank robbery and other violence crimes. Like they say in Akwa Ibom, a dog that has tasted the entrails of an animal will not stay away from the bush. These boys have tasted fast money from these crimes and they are not ready to repent of it.


A spokesperson for NDPVF, who claimed to be Asari second in command, General Gabriel Asabuja absolved members of the Asari group from the crime of kidnapping and other acts of terrorism. He disclosed that the boys involved in hostage taking cannot be controlled again because of the pecuniary gains inherent in the bisiness as "the monetary involment has opened the floodgate for formation of more militant groups in the state and until government establishes community police to checkmate them, there will be no end to this terrorist acts."

Asabuja regretted that kidnapping and hostage taking is yet to stop despite the release of Asari and blamed government for this development.

According to him, government officials who benefit from these activities have been the major hindrance stalling all sincere efforts to curb the activities of these criminal elements.

On Monday, July 2, 2007 Vice President Goodluck Jonathan on behalf of the Federal Government inaugurated a Peace and Conflict Resolution Committee. The committee is expected to coordinate similar committees set up by the various Niger Delta states to see how the current violence in the region can be brought under control. Before now, Rivers State Governor, Omehia has set up a Peace and Rehabilitation Committee for the state headed by Alhaji Hassan Douglas. Omehia promised a reward of a million naira for the first one hundred cultists and militants who would repent of their criminal activities. But this reward for repentance has drawn a lot of criticisms from the public. There is a story going roun that during former Governor Peter Odili administration, a self acclaimed repentant cultist collected money from the government and instead of using the money to set up a business he used it to buy guns, which he rents out to criminals.

Ledum Mitee, President of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People [MOSOP] described the offer of money for repentant cultists and militants as an incentive for violence. According to Mitee, there is every reason for people to go into violence to get millions overnight. We are against giving money to cultists and militants for them to renouce cultism. There has to be a comprehensive strategy to be sustained in ensuring that the money does not go into wrong hands," Mitee maintained. Chairman of the Niger delta Civil Society Coalition, MR. Anyakwee Nsirimovu recalled "In 2004 we saw the mistakes of careless distribution of cash for weapons and so-called rehablitation of youths which had little credibility and no follow up. Now we are seeing promises of one million naira to youths with absolutely no sign of a strategy." Rather than the rewarding of violence, Nsirimovu suggested a roadmap, which would address resource control, accountable government, self determination and the protection of the environment.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 030707


Violence in Port Harcourt Kills 20 (Daily Sun, Reuters, Nigerian Tribune, Vanguard)

NO fewer than 20 persons lost their lives Sunday night in Port Harcourt when gunmen took over major streets, shooting sporadically. The cause of their action was still unclear at press time.

The shooting started from Water lines, an area where most travellers from the state capital board vehicles. There was panic while the shooting lasted. Sources said several persons sustained gun shot wounds.

Blood flowed in Mile One, Diobu area of Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital, on Sunday night, when unknown gunmen shot randomly in the street. Among those killed were two ladies and an elderly man, while about 20 others, who were badly injured, have been hospitalized.

At press time, it was not clear where the gunmen came from or who they were, but eye witnesses told Daily Sun that they first came to Elechi Beach Street, in Diobu, in an unmarked Mercedes Benz car from where they drove to No.1 Abakiliki/Ojike Street, where they shot and killed three young men. In Abakiliki Street, relatives of the victims, told Daily Sun that Ikuroa Briggs and Biobele Princewill had gone to visit their friend, Dokubo Grandvill, when the gunmen opened fire on them without notice.

The dead including a woman who was hit in her car by a stray bullet, were killed in the high density Diobu district of the city where the rival gangs clashed late on Sunday, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) quoted the local police chief as saying.

At Njemanze, about six persons were feared killed, including a little girl said to be assisting her mother to sell roasted corn by the roadside. At Emenike, a lady was shot dead in her Mercedes Benz car, and just some metres away from where her car was parked another corpse laid dead on the ground.

On Abakelike road, a pregnant woman was reportedly killed by stray bullets in a church where she had gone to worship. Another lady in Okija Street allegedly died on her way to buy drugs at a nearby chemist shop.

Families lucky to be indoors locked themselves. Market that springs up by the roadside in Mile One every evening hurriedly packed up with traders and buyers fleeing in all directions. As at 730 p.m., the Mile One-- Mile Three part of the busy Ikwerre road was free of traffic. The few motorists around the Mile One part of the road were forced to go through Okija Street and other adjourning streets as the Police at their Mile One station blocked the road to traffic.

Passengers were left stranded as commercial buses and taxis were not in sight.

The fighting, which raged until the early hours of Monday, was the latest example of violence in Nigeria's lawless southern delta, where attacks on oil facilities, kidnapping of foreigners and gang bloodletting have increased since 2006.

Gang clashes are a common occurrence in Port Harcourt, the main city in Nigeria's oil heartland and gunmen frequently engage in turf wars to assert their supremacy.

Two people were killed in the city when unidentified gunmen opened fire on a crowd last month, while at least four died in clashes between rival gangs in April.

Violence over the last 18 months has prompted thousands of foreign workers to flee in the Niger Delta, a maze of mangrove-lined creeks that is home of Nigeria's oil wealth, and shut down about a third of the country's production capacity.

Poverty and endemic corruption in government is at the root of much of the insecurity in the region, where impoverished fishing villages host Africa's biggest oil industry.

It was further gathered that the gunmen drove to Njemanze Street, where they shot two persons to death, including an elderly man. In Okija Street, the hoodlums killed a lady and two men. The yet-to-be identified lady, was killed inside her dark blue 504 Peugeot car, with registration number, Rivers AV 270 PHC at No 2, Okija Street, while the two men, identified as Ifeanyi, a welder and Clement Nwene, were killed a few blocks away.

Another lady, whose name was simply given as Rose and two men said to be Hausa were killed in Gambia Street, near Okija, while some other victims were said to have died at Teme Clinic where they were taken for treatment.

Following activities of militants, living in Port Harcourt has become risky as hoodlums are fast changing the metropolis from its Garden City status to a city of blood. Concerned residents are expressing worry over this development. According to them, there is hardly any day that passes without one form of killing or another in various parts of the city.

The residents said that the killings had become so rampant that human lives seemed to have lost value in the city. They said that the current killings took a different dimension, as no rival group seems to be fighting with each other.

More than 30 other people, mostly unconnected with the groups, were said to have sustained varying degrees of injuries in the shoot-out.

The cultists, who took over the streets of Diobu for more than 40 minutes from around 7:00 p.m., shot indiscriminately, leading to the killing of some innocent people.

Nigerian Tribune gathered from security sources that a group known as “Klansmen” stormed the Diobu area, which they believed was the stronghold of another cult group, the notorious De Bam cult group.

According to a source, the Klansmen had accused the De Bam group of invading Ogbakiri community in Emohua Local Government Area of the state earlier in the year, during which it killed many of their rivals, among whom was Prince Igodo, a gang leader.

According to reports, the group moved from one area of Diobu to another, attacking both their enemies and any other person who was unlucky to cross their path.

Two bodies were picked up from Okija Street, three from Abakaliki/Ojike Streets, about seven from the Water Front and about two from Wokoma Street.

Sources informed the Nigerian Tribune that one of the two victims on Okija Street was a woman who was shot in her car. According to the sources, “I gathered that her husband is in prison, may be they had marked that car. I learnt they sprayed nothing less than ten rounds of ammunition on her.”

When contacted for details of the attack on the area, the Divisional Police Officer for Mile One Police Division, Mr. Emmanuel Asufi, confirmed the incident.

According to him, “we came across them around Ojoto and my men opened fire on them. When they saw that the fire was too much, they turned back and headed for Abakaliki to Ojike.

“We were still after them when I received a call that three people had been killed at Abakaliki. There is no way I would hear such a message that I won’t want to go back to see the situation.



Lagos Airport Radar Down
(Nigerian Tribune)

THE radar at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, has partially broken down following an electric power surge which blew up the screen of the radar system last Friday.

The incident, according to investigations, has hampered air traffic at the airport.

As a result, air traffic controllers have been coping with separation of flights in and out of the Lagos airport, while the relevant agency, Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), has been making frantic efforts to rectify the problem.

While confirming the incident, sources in the agency disclosed that there was no cause for alarm as the management had been working round the clock to put the radar back in order.

“The management has moved in to quickly rectify the situation, just as you know that providing excellent air traffic services is one of the top priorities of NAMA,”the sources said.

An air traffic controller who spoke on condition of anonymity admitted that the “failure is seriously hampering air traffic control.”


Floods Inundate Lagos Last Week
(Vanguard)

LAGOS, the acclaimed centre of excellence, literally prostrated to floods last week following persistent heavy downpour in the city. Commuters were stranded in various parts of the city as drivers took their rickety vehicles off the roads.

The few who plied the roads charged outrageous fees and many got stuck in the deep craters along the roads. Stranded passengers who could not make it back home slept in their offices while others who made it home did so way into midnight due to the terrible jam. Houses, particularly those built near drainage channels, were submerged and several residents had to scoop flood out of their living rooms.

The rain, which started late Wednesday continued until Friday, sacking many families from their homes in the flood-prone areas. Many motorists, unable to navigate their way out of the heavy waters, got stuck on the popular flood-prone Ahmadu Bello Way, Adeola Odeku and other parts of highbrow Ikoyi and Victoria Island.

Also flooded were Agege, Yaba, Gbagada, Ajao Estate, Amuwo Odofin, Oworonsoki, most parts of Surulere, Bariga, the ever-busy Lagos-Apapa expressway and the Lagos-Badagry expressway. The slum neighbourhoods of Ajegunle, Orile, Sari Iganmu, Amukoko, Isale Eko, where the drainage channels have become totally blocked, were, however, the worst hit. Commercial motorcycle operators in various parts of the city also suffered heavy losses as they were forced to stay away in order not to cause damage to their engines. They even turned down heavy financial inducements from passengers.

Our ordeal by residents

Narrating his ordeal to Vanguard Features (VF), Mr. Sunday Okonu, who lives in a two-room apartment in a tenant building in the Aiyetoro area of Ajegunle, said: "We were fast asleep when I suddenly noticed that the room I slept in with my wife was flooded. I rushed into the other room where my children were sleeping on the rug and found them already soaked. The furniture was also wet. It was a very bitter experience which I have not had since the past eleven years that I have lived in that yard. I had to take my children to our bed while I spent the entire night trying to scoop the flood out".

Miss Ijeoma Duru, who lives with her uncle in another Lagos suburb, was luckier than Mr. Okonu. She also recounted her experience to VF. "When we noticed that flood has found its way into our neighbour's flat, we decided to stay indoors in order to safeguard most of our valuables. My auntie suddenly turned into a prayer warrior as she called upon God to intervene since my uncle travelled. Her little children, who were apparently excited with the whole drama, laughed at her. But, God heard her prayers and prevented the flood from entering our flat", Ijeoma said.

For Lagos residents, the rainy season is, indeed, the most dreaded period of the year. The season comes with the perennial problems of heavy flooding, traffic snarl, buildings collapse and destruction of property worth several millions of Naira.

Environment experts who spoke to VF on the drainage and flooding problems in the state, painted a gloomy picture of the obstruction of the free flow of the drainage system which has aggravated flooding on Victoria Island, a highbrow residential-cum-commercial hub. Lagos lies below the sea level. Despite this, the State government has aided private developers to embark on high-scale land reclamation and the result is the enormous damage to the ecosystem. When it rains, most homes are often flooded because garbage blocks the canals, making it difficult for the water to flow. The flood sweeps up plastic bags and other trash that washes into the rooms of people living close to the canals. As the population of Lagos keeps increasing geometrically, there is no corresponding improvement on the infrastructure to deal with the waste they generate. Most of the garbage and sewage collected by private operators, as well as the effluents from industries, end up in the lagoons and creeks. The rest is burned, either in the numerous illegal rubbish dumps that dot the landscape or in the three official dumps run by the government.

Implement drainage master-plan

President of the Association of Town Planning Consultants of Nigeria (ATOPCON), Dr. Femi Olomola, hinged the perennial problem of flooding in Lagos on three main factors - Government has failed to faithfully implement the drainage master-plan; most drainages and canals in the State are blocked as well as illegal erection of houses, kiosks and containers on drainage channels.

Olomola, who is a past Chairman of the Lagos State chapter of the Nigerian Institute of Town Planners and the current President of the Association of Town planning Consultants of Nigeria (ATOPCON), explained that the drainage master-plan took care of things like the generation and flow of water as well as their acidity, but lamented that "like most other master-plans in this country, it is being implemented on ad-hoc basis".

Dr. Olomola tasked the drainage department in the State Ministry of Environment to stop the usual complaint of dearth of funds and brace up to the challenges of, at least, ensuring that blocked canals and other drainage outlets are cleared for free flow of water to be made possible.

Said he: "When it rains, the flood (water) from the smaller drainage should empty into the bigger channels and into the lagoon or ocean. When these channels are blocked, the water will overflow and spill onto the streets."

Flat topography, blocked drains responsible for flooding

Immediate past President of the Nigerian Institution of Structural Engineers (NIStructE), Mr. Kunle Adebajo, also spoke on what causes flooding in the city.

"The water level of Lagos is high and it is, to a large extent, surrounded by water. The topography of the city is relatively flat and flat terrains do not give much room for the design and construction of proper functional self cleaning drains in terms of minimum allowable slopes, etc. In such a situation, very deep drain sections would normally be required and, yet, the high water table does not facilitate this.

This is generally the reason behind having shallow drains in the Lagos environs, he explained Continuing, Engr Adebajo, a Senior Partner with Ove Arup & Partners, (a firm of structural engineers), posited that the forces of nature are against Lagos. "Apart from the water that naturally drains into the ground, majority of the water would normally be expected to be channelled towards storm water outfalls. The main outfalls for storm water runoff in Lagos are canals and the lagoon. Unfortunately, they are also characterised by high water levels. In addition, the existing condition of the main storm water outfalls is very poor and most of the canals are stagnant".

Engr. Adebajo explained that "if we now add to this the lack of an effective general storm water drainage system in Lagos and the indiscriminate dumping of refuse both on the roads and in the existing drains, wherever they exist, we now have a recipe for disaster and that is the reason why so much chaos is wreaked out by the onset of the rains. When you have blocked canals, the result will surely be the persistent storm water flooding, as experienced in Lagos, as this results in impeded and reduced discharge of storm water runoffs".

Mr. Adebajo also faulted the unauthorised erection of structures on the drainage alignments and canals, saying that they further compound the problem of flooding in the State.

He stated that some of the existing drains were poorly designed in terms of their discharge capacity.

Asked what it takes to dredge the canals, he replied thus: "Firstly, it requires commitment. There is no doubt that it is capital intensive and, for this reason, I would always recommend that proper feasibility studies and engineering designs be carried out first before embarking on the actual work. Illegally located buildings and structures will also need to be demolished and this will mean that people will end up having to be displaced. The drainage system will, however, be dramatically improved and, considering the benefit to all who live in Lagos, and, indeed, the benefit to the economy of the entire nation, this is by no means is too great a sacrifice to pay.

He canvassed the construction of more drainage structures to compliment the existing ones which also have to be kept functional. "A proper storm water drainage master plan needs to be prepared for Lagos and, of course, faithfully implemented. Only qualified Civil/Structural Engineers should be involved in the design and execution of drainage works.

Existing structures built, whether legally or illegally, on any drainage alignments needs to be demolished. Future developments on drain lines must not be allowed. Where possible, roads and building levels should to be raised well above the nearest canal maximum tidal level. Indiscriminate dumping of refuse must continue to be discouraged and Government policy on this needs to be strictly enforced. In this regard, it is important that every single resident of Lagos has a role in keeping the environment clean and clearing all drains of refuse" he advised.

MEND Insists on Resource Control (Daily Champion)

A militant group, Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) has said that no amount of blackmail or intimidation would force it to abandon the struggle for resource control.

Spokesman of the group, Jomo Gbomo who stated this in a press statement made available to Daily Champion in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, noted that the group and other genuine ones are fighting for the just cause of the Niger Delta, which includes resource control and a better deal for people of the region; adding that MEND is not concerned about the release of an individual.

"Until our demands are met, we will continue with our campaign, utilizing tactics we deem necessary," he noted.

Reacting to a recent statement credited to leader of the Niger Delta Vigilantes, Mr. Tom Ateke that groups in the oil rich region would cease hostilities going by the release of Ijaw militant leader, Alhaji Mujaheed Asari-Dokubo, he said that Ateke was not working with them.

On alleged claims by some groups that they represent MEND, Gbomo said the movement does not fraternize with media professionals or journalists warning impostors to desist from seeking cheap publicity before they are dealt with.


VP Says Niger Delta a "War Zone." (Daily Champion)

Vice President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday described the Niger Delta region as a war zone, insisting that the problem of the area is beyond pipeline vandalisation and hostage taking.

Jonathan who stated this in Port Harcourt, Rivers State while inaugurating the Niger Delta Peace and Conflict Resolution Committee of the oil-rich region to the era of a civil war, with armed youths controlling affairs of their communities.

Lamenting the poor living conditions of indigenes of the region.

Dr. Jonathan however absolved immediate past governors of the Niger Delta States of being insensitive to the developmental needs of the people.

The Vice President pointed out that there is erroneous impression among many Nigerians that the Niger Delta neglect, marginalization and underdevelopment started eight years ago and that the immediate past governors collected so much money and did not do anything to improve the conditions of their people.

Although he admitted that there might have been some leakages in the way finances were manage in the past eight years, he argued that does not means the Niger Delta crisis started then.

Jonathan recalled that the crisis came to public knowledge before independence of Nigeria and the colonial government did not do anything about it and subsequent federal administration neglect of the area gave rise to the present situation in the oil-rich region.

He pointed out that if the situation is left unchecked, most companies operating in the region may leave even as he appealed to all stakeholders to come together to see how the issue could be resolved.

Inaugurating the committee, Jonathan noted that issues like hostage taking cut across borders of the various states as expatriates kidnapped in one state are usually taken to other states.

He explained that each state would have its own committee based on its local circumstances while the one inaugurated would serve as a coordinating committee working with the various states committees.

Dr Jonathan listed the committee's terms of reference to include liaising with and coordinating activities of the various states committees, monitoring of organization whose activities cut across the region, liaising with state government to carry out responsibility that may be assigned to it by the vice president or the president.

The committee which has Senator David Briggidi as chairman has a life span of 12 months which may be reviewed at its expiration as well as its terms of reference.

Other members include Mr. George Timmimmiand Mr. Godwin Ebosa representing Delta State; Chief James Jephtap and Mr. Joshua Benamesia, Bayelsa; Arc Esoetok Ikpong Ikpong Etteh and Elder Bassey Ekpa, Akwa Ibom; His Royal Highness [Colonel] Asakara Ekanem Ita Umoh [rted] and Barrister Bassey Ukim, Cross River; Prince Francis Iyasere and Mrs Florence Gbinije-Erhabor, Edo while Mr. Kingley Kuku of NDDC is the secretary of the Committee.

The oil companies as expected to nominate four members of the committee, NNPC, Police and the State Security Services are to nominate a member each.

In his remarks, the Rivers State Governor, Sir Celestine Omehia described the inauguration as historic and a show of commitment of the people to find peace.

Omehia said the people of Niger Delta have gathered to publicly demonstrate that they are ready to take the challenge of finding solution to a problem that is confronting the region.

The ceremony was attended by governors of Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, cross River, Delta, Edo and Rivers states.