By Victor Bieni, Asaba
The National Coordinator, Centre For Peace And Environmental Justice (CEPEJ), a renowned environmental rights activist from the Niger Delta extraction, Comrade Sheriff Mulade has charged stakeholders in the region, especially those in the oil and gas bearing communities, not to compromise by palm greasing from oil companies which do not operate in line with environmental best practices.
CEPEJ Boss,Comrade Mulade gave this advice in a press statement made available to some group of Journalists in CEPEJ office at Asaba, Delta State Capital on Monday, 3rd January 2022 in a new year 2022 message to Niger-Delta People, Leaders and stakeholders in the region.
According to him, “One big challenge faced in promoting growth and development in our communities is compromise from those who we naturally believe should fight to ensure that the needful is done which will benefit greater majority of the people at the long run. Noting that the leaders should strive at all times to work for the economic growth and advancement of the people”.
He strongly appealed to Niger Deltans particularly leaders of oil and gas host communities, to protect and save their environment from further devastation in 2022.
Chief Mulade while reacting to the oil spill situation at Nembe area of Bayelsa State, advised stakeholders to task oil companies to tackle the challenges of pollution in other to reverse to its original status of the degraded environment of the Niger Delta Region, as well as protect and sustain the environment for future generations.
The statement reads in parts: “It is worthy of note that the National Oil Spill Detection and Responses Agency (NOSDRA), Nigeria Upstream Regulatory Commission( NUPRC ) and other environmental regulatory agencies now seemingly appeared to be tools in the hands of multinational oil and gas exporting companies in Nigeria by compromising and taking biased actions against the local people when it comes to the need for objectively in dispensing oil spill matters because the locals have nothing to offer Government officials”.
“We are Worried over the discovery of the badly degraded environment of oil spills activities. The economic damages as a result of oil spillages may not be recovered in the next 30 years”.
Chief Mulade, the Ibe-sorimowei of ancient Gbaramatu Kingdom in Warri South West LGA of Delta State, urged the Federal Government and other stakeholders to prevail on the oil multinationals in 2022, to come up with urgent measures towards reversing the degraded Niger Delta environment, so as to protect the flora and fauna of the region.
Comrade Mulade is a World Distinguished Peace and Environmental Justice Advocate. He us also, a fellow of Nigerian Environmental Society, appealed to leaders especially Ijaw Nation Congress (INC) to set up what he called Environmental Impact Assessment/Sustainability Committee to ascertain the level of degradation for recovery.
Speaking further on the negative impact of oil pollution in the Niger-Delta Region, the statement added: “It is wrong to allow oil companies award cleanup contracts to incompetent contractors to save costs and create divisions among the people, as there are standard procedures for carrying out oil spill cleanups globally”.
“CEPEJ therefore, enjoined leaders in the region to ensure that oil companies adhere strictly to global best practices, instead of awarding clean up jobs to contracting firms that lack the capacity and experience to do the job”.