Nigeria: Militants - Why We Are Targeting Rivers State
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Vanguard (Lagos)
11 October 2008
Posted to the web 11 October 2008
Emma Amaize And Uduma Kalu
Movement for Emancipation of the Niger-Delta (MEND) has explained why Rivers State has remained the focus of its violent attacks.
The state was the theatre of the five-day 'Oil war' declared by the group following what it alleged was attacks on its areas by the Joint Task Force (JTF) made up of the Nigerian armed forces, formed five years ago by the federal government to maintain peace in the violent but oil, rich region.
But curiously, while Rivers State, hitherto a quiet state boiled, other Niger Delta states remained calm, especially, the violent prone states: Bayelsa and Delta.
In a reply to MEND, however, Rivers State government insisted that it would not do business with those it called criminals. The criminals, it said are those involved in kidnapping, even of babies and old persons. Their activities, it went on, have done tremendous damage to the regions' economy as well..
However, Niger Delta youths under the umbrella of Ijaw Youths Leadership Forum (IYLF) have demanded the release of Mr. Henry Okah, leader of Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
At a meeting held recently at Oporoza in Delta State, the youths reiterated that the much-desired peace in the Niger Delta will remain a fleeting illusion if Okah was not released to be part of the peace process.
Meanwhile, Leader of Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force (NDPVF), AlhajiMujahid Asari Dokubo, has said that because criminals have taken over the struggle in the region, his group has pulled back so as not to be seen to be part of the criminality going on there.
"We want to stand aside. Let people not say we saw the Niger Delta People's Volunteers or the Niger Delta People's Salvation Front. That we saw them kidnapping. That we saw them doing this. We have come out from among them, and we are separate from them. The criminals are carrying out the activities and we don't want to be part of it," Dokubo said
In an online interview with Saturday Vanguard, the MEND said, "the other Niger Delta governors are showing us (MEND) respect (high opinion) and we will give them respect in return."
Unlike Amaechi, the other governors, the group said, are more perceptive and tactful in their approach to the region's "struggle than Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State, who branded freedom fighters (militants) as criminals, yet his government is the one breeding criminals, as evidenced with the recent arrest of a number of its top functionaries by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for 'huge financial crimes'."
A top MEND leader had told Saturday Vanguard that, "In Rivers State, we see the state government as a factor in the crisis because of Governor Amaechi's way of doing things.
The governor himself is a participant in the crisis and so, it will be difficult for him to get the militants there to agree to give peace a chance the way Uduaghan has done in Delta", he said.
Saturday Vanguard learnt that one thing that has worked very well for Uduaghan also in his security and peace agenda was how he managed the delicate power play between the Ijaw and Itsekiri in the chairmanship of the three Warri local government areas, which is Warri South-West, Warri South and Warri North local government areas.
The second-in-command in the MEND hierarchy and indeed, the commander of the current MEND operations in Niger-Delta is said to hail from Bayelsa State.
Though relationship between him and his state governor, Sam Timipre-Sylva, is said not to be rosy, the governor is said to have found a way of reaching and asking the MEND leader to allow peace to reign in the state.
Dependable sources said Governor Timipre-Sylva was presently rehabilitating one of the powerful militant leaders in the state who decided to lay down his arms and he has a working alliance with militants in the state to maintain peace.
Prof. Oserheimen Osunbor (Edo), Chief Godswill Akpabio (Akwa-Ibom) and Dr. Liyel Imoke (Cross River) are not having much challenge from militants in their states. In Edo State, the protest from Ijaw youths who are agitating for the creation of more local government areas for them in the state and Osunbor is trying to manage the situation.
In Akwa-Ibom State, the observable problem has been more of disagreements between some oil communities and an oil company over certain rights and environmental pollution.
But while acknowledging the suave approach of some of the governors, the militant group stated, "We are not in any way subject to them (Governors) and when the need arises we will take our orders from elsewhere."
Asari told Saturday Vanguard at a gathering of political activists last Tuesday in Lagos that the allegation that he and MASSOB leader, Chief Ralph Uwazuruike, are into arms deal with one Mrs. Duru is a ruse by the government to re-arrest them and sent back to prison.
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