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» BNW : Biafra Nigeria World Message Board: the Voice of a New Generation » BNW News, Current Events, and Politics Forums » The Great Forum » Niger Delta records 4,835 Oil spills in 20 years.

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Author Topic: Niger Delta records 4,835 Oil spills in 20 years.
Odili
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Niger Delta Records 4,835 Oil Spills in 20 Years
This Day (Lagos)
August 3, 2001
Posted to the web August 3, 2001

John Iwori
Yenagoa

A member of the governing council of the National Human Rights Commis-sion (NHRC) Mr. Ray Ekpu, has disclosed that the Niger Delta region recorded a total number of 4,835 oil spills from 1976 to 1996.

Ekpu who is also the chief executive officer of Newswatch magazine stated that available statistics showed that the incidents resulted in a loss of 2.4 million barrels of crude oil in the region within the period.

Presenting a paper on Environmental Degradation, Oil Installation Vandalisation, Responsibilities of Oil companies to the host communities and conflict resolution as human right issues in the Niger Delta," the renowned journalist noted that because of the debilitating health hazards occasioned by oil exploration activities, the developmental problems of the Niger Delta region have been compounded.

Ekpu who spoke in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, at a one day Human Rights Forum organised by NHRC observed that the activities of the various multinational oil companies operating in the area have resulted in undue pressure on available land mass.

The problems, according to him, include over farming, deforestation and erosion which have worsened the plight of the people in the Niger Delta region.

He called for deliberate remediating measures, stressing that if urgent steps are not taken, the people would be exposed to imminent danger through a constant devastation of their source of livelihood.

In his remarks, the state deputy governor, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan called for the abrogation of all offensive petroleum laws in the country.

According to him, the laws have encouraged the oil companies to exploit the mineral wealth of the land, abuse the environment without recourse to internationally accepted standards.

___________________
Udezue Odili Offong Obuekwe Anaeliaku


Posts: 615 | From: Houston, Texas | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
Enobong Umoren
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This is why the youths and the grassroots are disgusted in the Niger-Delta. The old guard are simply out of touch. Fortunately, many of the respected leaders in the area are catching on to the yearnings of the youth.

___________________
The only solution is to divide BiafraNigeria. If not now, then when? If not us, then who?

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Ifeanyi Chukwukere Obigbo
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The following article is quite fascinating. Enjoy.
==========================================
"The Land is Dead": Eyewitness Account of Ogbodo oil spill, July 2001

IOWG (New York)

July 29, 2001
Posted to the web August 3, 2001

Terisa Turner
New York

Dr. Terisa Turner, an activist and academic who has published extensively on oil and Nigeria, visited the Nigerian Delta in July to view at first hand, the damage caused by oil spills in the area. As a co-director of the non-governmental organization, International Oil Working Group (IOWG), which is strongly critical of the oil companies' role in the Delta, she wrote this account of her tour.

During my ten day visit in July 2001 to oil-impacted communities in Nigeria's oilbelt, as a guest of Niger Delta Women for Justice and Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria; a massive spillage of crude petroleum took place in a large town called Ogbodo, near Port Harcourt.

The fundamental right to life of thousands of Nigerians has been put in question by this Shell oil pipeline explosion and the resulting 18-day long spill. Human rights of all have been violated by corporate malpractice with state acquiescence.

But especially the human rights of women have been violated. It is women who are the mainstay of the economy in the pristine tropical rain forest and riverine ecology of Ogbodo. It is women who gather seafood from the wetlands and mangrove swamps. It is women who make palm oil in hundreds of small factory operations. It is women who grow vegetables and gather medicinal herbs from the forests.

It is women's power that has been undermined by the sudden destruction of the economy of Ogbodo. Expanding corporate power, in this case expressed by Shell, the world's second largest oil corporation; has eliminated overnight, the ecological foundation of women's and men's autonomous subsistence from which these self-confident peasant-fishing people had, for centuries, derived significant wealth and tremendous cultural resilience.

As women and men of Ogbodo struggle to survive on a day-to-day basis without drinking water and in the midst of breath-choking petroleum fumes; the web of resistance is woven yet again. A very long history of autonomous struggle is there as a grounding. But also there is in the Delta a raw fear of massacre. Shell, other transnational oil companies and the Nigerian state have visited upon oil-traumatized communities in the recent past the most terrible retribution for imagined and actual resistance to oil company presence and to oil company destruction.

Shell's unfounded charge, immediately upon hearing reports that the Shell pipeline carrying oil through Ogbodo had burst, was that villagers cut the line, despite its being buried six feet deep and split from its underside. Shell further charged that villagers prevented Shell personnel from entering the community.

Villagers refuted these charges but expressed palpable fear that the false allegations were a prelude to military attack and massacre, since this was the characteristic pattern of response by oil companies and the government to crisis in the Niger Delta. Villagers' terror was intensified when Shell contractors set alight crude oil on top of the creeks and lakes which surround almost all village land.

Women's resistance is thus taking the form of declarations of cordiality to all visitors, especially the media. Ogbodo women moved to actively establish alliances with the non-governmental organization, Niger Delta Women for Justice, immediately after the crude coursed through their farms and fishing ponds.

On 14 July 2001 community spokespersons appealed for help and a hearing from human rights organizations, from Environmental Rights Action, from the United Nations and the Red Cross and from the international media. Women of Ogbodo draw strength from the gains made by Ogoni women in FOWA (Federation of Ogoni Women's Associations) within MOSOP (Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People), the organization established by Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was executed in 1995 by the military regime with Shell complicity.

The steadfast stand of Ken Saro-Wiwa's parents, who continue to call for popular resource control and the expulsion of Shell from the Niger Delta, serves as a strength and inspiration to the Ikwerre peoples from which the women and men of Ogbodo are drawn.

In June and July 2001, as G8 protestors against corporate globalization prepared to go to Genoa, Italy; on the ground in Nigeria 150,000 residents of the community of Ogbodo battled a massive petroleum spill from a Shell pipeline which burst on 24 June, churning crude into the surrounding waterways for 18 days until Shell clamped the pipe on 12 July. Severe environmental damage and threat to life by Shell's neglect is the other side of the `corporate rule' coin of ever-expanding neo-liberal license.

The dangers to human life, human rights and the environment were dramatically experienced by Ogbodo community members in Nigeria's `Shell-Shocked' oilbelt. It is precisely these dangers that the 100,000 protestors in Genoa sought to causally link to the expansion of corporate rule.

Under the rubric of co-called `free-trade' Shell and other oil companies are being given carte blanche to expand petroleum exploration and production activities in Nigeria and elsewhere with ever-decreasing provision for ecological and social accountability.

For example, Nigeria and the World Bank have, in 2001, agreed to a US$15,000,000 loan, in which World Bank public funds are made available to enable contractors to Shell to build petroleum infrastructure. What is especially negative about this loan is that it is made under a new `fast track' provision which licenses Shell's contractors, who are the loan beneficiaries, to forego the carrying out of normal and, under World Bank operating principles, legally required, environmental and social impact assessments (Institute for Policy Studies and Friends of the Earth, `World Bank plans to fund `Risky' Project Involving Shell in Nigeria,' 24 May 2001. For copies of the leaked document containing details, visit http://www.seen.org).

Shell's June-July 2001 violations of environmental and human rights are assessed in the following eight points:

1. On 24 June 2001 the community of Ogbodo (150,000 people) in Rivers State, Nigeria, heard a loud explosion which was the bursting of a Shell Petroleum pipeline which traverses the village lands, themselves nearly surrounded by waterways. Crude oil began to spill out into the environment. Rains and swiftly flowing water rapidly distributed the crude oil into the waterways surrounding the community.

2. The next morning, June 25th, community members informed Shell Petroleum Development Corporation in Port Harcourt of the oil spill. Shell workers were on strike. No quick response was forthcoming. Days passed as the oil flowed into rivers around Ogbodo. Finally a Delta State based Spill Response Company contractor to Shell arrived on the site. Then a major fire raged around the town. Villagers claim that the contractor set the fire to burn off some of the crude. Trees were burned and community members fled in terror.

3. Eventually Shell deposited ten 500-litre drinking water plastic tanks in Ogbodo. This was drastically inadequate for the 150,000 people all of whom had depended on creeks for water. The tanks were filled every two to three days by Shell. The supplies of water were then withdrawn from the tanks by villagers in just a few hours. Shell's extremely inadequate response left the community with almost no drinking water, and nothing for cooking food, washing dishes, clothes or their bodies.

4. Some days after the spill began Shell sent an old van with three community health workers in it to dispense first aid, mainly in the form of tablets. There was one doctor with the team for a few hours each weekday but not on Sundays. Villagers were acutely ill. On Saturday 14 July I was informed by one of the health workers that he had seen only 12 patients that day. He would not comment further. Villagers complained of many ailments and told our media team that they were not being attended to. They informed us that three people who had been in good health prior to the spill had died just after it. Families with money and alternative lodging were evacuating Ogbodo. But the vast majority had no lodging alternatives and no water. Petroleum fumes were intense as were insect infestations including malaria-carrying mosquitoes.

5. On Monday 9 July 2001 contract workers employed by Shell stated that they had removed 70,000 barrels of crude from waterways via truck. On Saturday 14 July crude was covering waterways. I took a sample of water from the community's main water supplying stream: it is mainly crude oil.

6. On Tuesday 10 July Shell issued a press release in which the company falsely alleged that:

a. the pipe was opened by community members engaged in sabotage;

b. the community members prevented Shell personnel from approaching the spill site. The accusations were of hostility to Shell and threats of hostage taking

c. unknown parties had cut plastic tubes of about six inches in diameter which the clean-up contractor had placed in creeks in a (futile) attempt to stem the flow of crude into surrounding villages;

d. Shell had provided drinking water, food and medical attention to Ogbodo victims.

On 14 July chiefs and villagers stated that these claims were false. The Shell claim to have provided emergency water, food and medical attention was true but the amounts were so pitifully inadequate as to suggest that the claims were made by Shell strictly for public relations purposes.

7. On 14 July the chiefs refused to receive a few bags of relief food supplies until Shell retracted its false accusations regarding alleged sabotage of the pipeline (Shell's standard charge despite not ever bringing suspects to account) which was old and deteriorated with rust. The pipeline was well past its lifetime of safe operation and should have been replaced by Shell years ago. Villagers refused the token food supplies, which Shell deposited at the local police station, until Shell retracted its claims about hostility from villagers as Shell's reason for its very late response to the spill.

8. Shell drew up a draft `Memorandum of Understanding' between itself and the Ogbodo chiefs in an attempt to conflate the following two distinct stages of oil company response to its spill of petroleum:

a. Stage One: emergency life support to the victims, including medical and evacuation response; combined with prompt halting of flow of crude in the broken pipeline, clamping of the pipeline and emergency clean-up of spilled crude;

b. Stage Two: longer-term reclamation of the environment, documentation of both short and long-term health implications pending compensation; and documentation of all other impacts and costs, in particular those concerning economic loss and elimination of a whole riverine, fishing and agricultural way of life.

By delivering a draft Memorandum of Understanding to the chiefs on 14 July prior to taking care of the first emergency concerns (a, above); Shell was making life-support dependent on chiefs signing a long-term compensation agreement. The villagers were in crisis and hence were not in a position to settle final compensation claims. The immediate need was and is for life support. But Shell was making the provision of such life-support conditional upon community agreement to substandard terms for basic compensation and fundamental rehabilitation. This is unprincipled and was identified by chiefs as yet another instance of continuing environmental racism on the part of Shell against their community and other settlements in the Niger Delta.

Shell was said to be offering compensation of 100 million naira (100,000 US dollars or UK sterling 60,000) to compensate for the devastation. This sum is absurdly inadequate, even for a single person from the 150,000 strong community. Nevertheless, the Nigerian media reported that government representatives were endorsing Shell's proposed `settlement.'

The chiefs' counter claim was to ask Shell for copies of the full agreements with the last five communities into which Shell had spilled crude oil which are located in Western Europe and North America. The Ogbodo chiefs intended to seek comparable long term reparations.

By mid-July Ogbodo women were working actively with members of the non-governmental organization, Niger Delta Women for Justice, in completing reporting questionnaires which facilitated their documenting the health and economic impacts of the Shell oil spill.

Members of the Niger Delta Women for Justice have raised the question of seeking global solidarity in instituting a renewed international boycott of all Shell petroleum products. Members of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria are engaged in defining methods for establishing `resource control' by local people over petroleum in the Niger Delta.

These non-governmental organizations along with the International Oil Working Group are raising the human rights violations committed by Shell and other petroleum transnationals in all available fora, with a view to gaining experience in organizing coordinated initiatives in several countries to resist and transcend the life-threatening corporate-rule regime.

Meanwhile the August-September 2001 United Nations `World Conference Against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance', Durban, South Africa, will decide on how comprehensive reparations, including for corporate environmental and economic racism, can best be secured.

For further information, contact Terisa E. Turner Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology University of Guelph, Guelph ON Canada N1G 2W1 tel: 519-787-0609; Fax: 519-787-9332

Copyright © 2001 IOWG.

___________________
ICO


Posts: 306 | From: Manitoba, Canada | Registered: Mar 2001  |  IP: Logged
Odili
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It is the Nigerian gov. that is encouraging those wicked oil companies. They supply them with weapons and soldiers to slaughter people just because they want to be treated as human beings not as retarded animals.

I can see that the Northerners and their Yoruba collaborators are determined to finish the Easterners by all means.

They have been exploiting the misunderstanding between the Igbos and their neighbors in NigerDelta with their divide and rule strategies. If the Easterners don't join hands together and stop fighting eachother or being suspicious of each other and unite to fight that fake oppressive government of Nigeria, the oil companies will keep on coming and destroying the land.


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Paul Ibekwe
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Turner's article tells a lot and reveals vividly well how the expatriate oil companies, especially Shell, in collaboration with the so-called Nigeria government helped in destroying the riverine areas; making it uninhabitable for the original owners of the land.

The question here is, what can be done to alleviate the problems of exploitation with Shell and other oil companies semmingly still interested in their quest to milk these riverine areas practically dry?


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Ifeanyi Chukwukere Obigbo
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Paul:
What can be done? What are the people concerned doing about it? wait for Obasanjo's Gestapo? Probably!

___________________
ICO

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Sam
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Odili, Paul & Ifeanyi,

U see, the people can do so much. They fought back and the result was death. Ken Saro Wiwa comes to mind. Odi is there as a testimony.

Obasanjo had always been underestimated. Rememember the Land Use decree? He and his colleagues promulgated it. I am yet to see a challenge to that decree. And the subsequent govts are using that decree as a cover to perpetrate injustices.

If adequate negotiations can be reached to abrogate the land use decree, these Oil companies will be seriously dealth with.

I remember once when I was discussing with colleagues "Business and Society" where ken saro Wiwa was featured.

To use the word anger will be an understatement in my tone of discussion. My Professor noticed. And said this "No oil company or business can do what they are doing if your government is not conniving"


And come to think of it, what are the deltans gaining from oil? Absolutely NOTHING but destruction of the environment.

The first strategy is to get the land use decree abrogated and other things will follow.

___________________
-----------
Sam


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Ifeanyi Chukwukere Obigbo
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Sam:
"Odi is there as a testimony." Give me a break. Whoever could have thought that Ken saro-Wiwa would have been a victim of all these mess?

[ 07, 2001: Message edited by: Ifeanyi Chukwukere Obigbo ]

___________________
ICO


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Sam
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Ifeanyi,
"Whoever could have thought that Ken saro-Wiwa would been a victim of all these mess".---
That's one of the most intelligent lines i have read.

Ifeanyi, that is why we must plan- really plan and then execute.


The empty vessels they say....... but when we plan and execute without all this foolish rancour it will be a surprise.... the best weapon...

___________________
-----------
Sam


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Ifeanyi Chukwukere Obigbo
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Sam:
Are you really sure of what you are saying? Planning now on whose behalf? Revenging Saro-Wiwa's death or reaching a compromise?

___________________
ICO

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Odili
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Sam
If u want to revenge Ken's death u are free
to do so. Count me out. I'll rather laugh at this stupidity than revenge his death. That confused Igbo/Biafra hater deserved what he got. The Igbo hating leaders of Niger Delta should have known better than hand over the birth rights of their people to Nigeria. Now they are the ones suffering. THEY thought we wanted their freaking oil when we had enough in our lands but now they hav been shown that their greatest enemies are not from the East.

The problem is that the Niger deltans (the elites and some of the non elites) haven't learnt their lessons, at all. The Ogonis thought they go at it all alone but their Igbo hating leader Saro was silenced forever by his masters.

The one and only option is Biafra. Luckily MASSOB is growing in number and ethnicity.


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