Monday, August 16, 2021

Press Release by Igbo National Movement on the So-Called Sit-at-Home Calls Announced by some IPOB Members.

Dear President of Town Unions/Association

Dear Chairmen of Village Meetings

Ndi Nna na ndi Nne al’Igbo

 

Anyi ekele kwa onye-öwula. Ndu mmiri, ndu azu; Onye biri, ibeyá biri.

 

PRESS RELEASE BY IGBO NATIONAL MOVEMENT ON THE SO-CALLED SIT-AT-HOME CALLS ANNOUNCED BY SOME IPOB MEMBERS.

 

K’anyi wepu aka enwe n’ofe tupt ówuó aka mmadu - A stich in time saves nine

 

Without doubt, nd’Igbo have legitimate grievances against the outright vindictive and discriminatory policies and practices visited on us by the structure of and those who have ruled over the affairs of Nigeria, the country we were enmeshed in via fiat of British colonial governments. Practices which have served to push many of our young men and women to extremes in their natural quest for existence;

 

Without any doubt, nd’Igbo have a legitimate and internationally recognized right to self-determination and to have unhindered control over the management and administration of our lives and those of our future generations. A right, the actualization has become imperative due to the continuing aggressive anti-Igbo posture of and structure of the Nigerian State which has become an existential threat to nd’Igbo;

 

Without doubt also, under the present rulership of Nigeria, more than ever before except perhaps when the Nigerian State embarked on genocidal war of attrition against nd’Igbo, the very existence, homeland, lives and sustenance of nd’Igbo have come under sustained and persistent assault, making continued stay in the Nigerian territory an existential threat to nd’Igbo. An existential threat which, as our forebears will advise: like a bee perched on the scrotum has to be confronted with tact, lest our adversaries have cause to smile over our travails.

 

It is this issue of tact to address our common issues that has compelled the Igbo National Movement (INM) to address this correspondence directly to our customary age-old institutions for which nd’Igbo are unique amongst the peoples where they reside (our Community/Town Unions), and our Family units, in the believe that we will be able to abstain from self-destructive practices that will primarily be injurious to our people and not serve to attain intended objectives.

 

Due to impairments foisted on our customary institutions, the voices of reason amongst our People have been apparently drowned in an avalanche of vociferous emotion-driven babble which, feasting on the urgent desire of millions of our youth for emancipation, have embarked on paths that are fundamentally detrimental to our peoples and play into the general desires of those who do not wish nd’Igbo well.

 

Without any iota of doubt, the commemoration of the sacrifices of past martyrs is a universal practice and observance, whether it be sanctioned by the State or not. Nd’Igbo have for long, paid similar respect and reverence to their heroes’ past

 

What is however irrational are efforts to cut off one’s nose in order to spite one’s face – the meaningless call for a so-called ‘sit-at-home’ for specific days over unspecified durations for doubtful objectives. An old Igbo adage posits thus: okenye anaghi anu n’obodo ewu amuó n’óbu (an elder will not be around and allow a goat to deliver in tethers). It thus becomes incumbent for voices of reason to speak up, lest we are consumed by irrationality. 

 

By design, the rulers of the territory we presently find ourselves within under international guidelines/recognitions, Nigeria, have adopted policies which basically confine the vast majority of nd’Igbo to fending for self, via self-employment, and thus desirous to maximize returns per day.

 

For an entity claiming to be interested in the welfare and wellbeing of nd’Igbo to embark on activities geared towards reducing the number of days during which a self-employed may work, and following up with not just threats of violence for those who do not agree with such irrational decisions, but following up with actual destruction of private properties, harms to the individuals and in some instances, killing fellow nd’Igbo whose sole ‘wrong’ is the desire to provide for themselves and their families beats the imagination and call for sober reflection and outright condemnation by those with the overall best interest of nd’Igbo at heart.

 

Already, resulting from the first forced observance of this ‘sit-at-home’ on Monday 9th August, the losses suffered by nd’Igbo, in addition to loss of lives, properties and incomes estimated at several million US Dollars, include the disruption of academic opportunities for children in secondary schools in the Igboland who missed out on crucial examinations.

 

What can be claimed to have been achieved by observing/enforcing the said ‘sit-at-home’? Absolutely nothing but wastage and loss of lives, properties and incomes by nd’Igbo!

 

Must this path of folly be continued? Certainly NO! Continuing will only lead to more deaths, harms on nd’Igbo, losses and destructions all within Igboland – with no impact whatsoever either on other parts of the Nigeria where no sit-at-home is observed/enforced or on the cause for Igbo self-determination.

 

In keeping with yet another age-old adage of our people urges that ‘agbakó ñuo mamiri, yáá gbá ufufu’ (in unison more can be achieved), INM hereby calls on the proponents of the weekly sit-at-home campaigns to reassess their actions, retrace their steps, utterances and modus operandi and eventually be part of wider Igbo efforts at actualizing self-determination. The current ‘Eze-onyeagbalam’ (the all-knowing monarch) posture being displayed by the proponents of the sit-at-homes is self-injurious, counter-productive and ultimately un-Igbo.

 

To the leadership of Community and Town Unions and Associations spread across Igboland, and our Parents whose wards, children and possessions will bear the brunt of the continued ill-thought sit-at-home calls, we urge all to reach out to the proponents of this Call with the purpose of ensuring that commonsense and better tact prevails.

 

Igbo gáádi.Udo




Tuesday, July 20, 2021

Nigeria’s Petroleum Industry Bill: Have the Indigenous Host Communities been shortchanged once more?

 by Eze Eluchie


The passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) by both houses of Nigeria National Assembly, on the 1st of July 2021, after almost two decades of efforts at crafting a legislation that would rationalize and put into proper context Nigeria’s otherwise mostly unchartered Petroleum industry environment, where any and everything goes, was heralded with a sigh of relief by diverse stakeholders: For International petroleum investors - they now have a one-stop document where the rules of engagement in the petroleum industry was adequately enunciated; For operators (downstream and upstream alike), there was now detailed rules for their operations and for engagement with their host communities (indigenous owners of the lands where crude oil was sourced from); and the Host Communities – despite their initial demands to be accorded 10% of operational costs of the operators, they appeared to be at least, for the very first time, assured of a definite percentage of operators operational costs as their entitlements.

 

It thus appeared that the perennial elusive search for a peaceful environment for our petroleum sector to thrive and maximize its potentials has finally come to an end.

 

Is that truly the situation? We shall now venture to inquire into the PIB from the perspective of the Host Communities, to gauge if indeed the indigenous communities, the ‘geese that lay the golden egg’ of the mainstay of the Nigerian economy, have been well accommodated and their interests addressed by the PIB, which is currently awaiting the signature of the President of the Federal Republic to become law.

 

1.      The definition of Host Community

A host Community is defined under Sec. 318 of the PIB as: “any community situated in or appurtenant to the area of operation of a settlor, and any other community as a settlor may determine pursuant to Chapter Three of this Act”. The emboldened later part of the definition of Host Community (HC), which gives latitude to the Settlor (an Operator in the petroleum industry) to virtually do as it wishes with regards to deciding which community can be described as a ‘Host Community’ is quite worrisome and subject to abuse. Under the PIB, at par with communities where oil prospecting, extraction and refining activities are undertaken, communities over which petroleum pipeline traverse are now deemed as HC’s, and likewise ‘any other community as a Settlor may determine’.

 

In a nutshell, a Settlor can decide that a community anywhere, no matter how detached it is from its area of core operations, is a HC!

 

A situation that provides for such loose definition of ‘Host Community’, allowing wide discretion to the Settlor to determine which community so qualifies, is not well thought through and could give rise to further crisis during the implementation of the PIB.

 

2.      The Host Community Development Trust Fund (HCDTF)

The recognition of the need to allocate a specific percentage of total operational costs to Host Communities is a most welcome development towards attainment of harmonious working, living conditions and existence in our oil producing areas. The rationale behind whittling down the funds accruing to the Host Communities from 10% to its current 3% of operational costs, considering that the betterment of Host Communities is a fundamental objective of efforts at a Petroleum Industry Law, remains shrouded in mystery. {Section 240(2) PIB}. The allocation of a meagre 3% of operational costs for the needs of the Host Communities appears to be where Host Community benefits terminate in the PIB.

 

Under the PIB, the funds due to any Host Community, the Host Community Development Trust Fund (HCDTF) are paid into the custody of a Host Community Development Trust (HCDT), an entity that will be “set up by the Settlor, who shall determine its membership and the criteria for their appointment” {Section 242(1) PIB}. The Settlor will also determine the membership of the Board of Trustees {Section 242(2)}, (a)the selection process, procedure for meeting, financial regulations and administrative procedures of the Board of Trustees (b)the remuneration, discipline, qualification, disqualification, suspension and removal of members of the Board of Trustees; and (c) other matters other than the above relating to the operation and activities of the Board of Trustees{Section 242(4)}, and also appoint the Secretary to the Board{Section 242(5)}.

 

In other words, the meagre 3% of the operational costs which is ostensibly meant for the Host Communities, will not be given/presented to the Host Communities, but would rather be given to an entity created, staffed and under the purview of the Settlors. A Settlor is defined in Section 318 of the PIB as “a holder of an interest in a petroleum prospecting license or petroleum mining lease whose area of operations is located in or appurtenant to any community or communities”.

 

Incredulous as it may sound, under the PIB and in real terms, the 3% meant for the Host Communities will be under the full control of the Operators!

 

3.      Only 75% of the 3% HCDTF will get to the HCDT

Despite the meagre percentage (3% of operating costs of Operators) accorded for development of the Host Communities, under the PIB as passed by the National Assembly, only 75% of the 3% is assured to the HC’s in any given year.  Section 244(a) of the PIB clearly stipulates that the HCDT will allocate 75% of the sum available to the HCDT to a Capital Fund from which it will execute projects that have been approved.

 

244(a) of the PIB oddly enough, has an awkward proviso: “provided that any sums not utilised in a given financial year shall be rolled over and utilized in subsequent year” – making it expressly clear that not all the 75% of 3% may be utilized during a current accounting year. There is the likelihood that, even where the funds are released to the HCDT, factors may occur which will ordinarily make it impossible to use any portion of the said sum in any given year.

244(b) of the PIB Provides for 20% of the 3% to be reserved as ‘Reserve Fund’ for use in years “whenever there is a cessation in the contribution payable by the settlor”. This means that ordinarily, this sum will not be ordinarily available for HC developmental needs, save for when there is a ‘cessation’. More worrisome is the provision of Sec 234(4)[b] of the PIB, which allows the Settlor to, without any reasons being advanced for such refusal, refuse to fund this 20% of the 3% ‘Reserve Fund’ at the Settlors discretion.

244(c) of the PIB Allows for a further deduction of the sums due to the HC, by allocating the remainder 5% of the 3% for ‘Administrative Costs’

 

To further muddle up matters with regards to the deployment of HCDT Funds, the 75% that appears guaranteed for the HC is described as ‘Capital Fund’, which in Nigerian parlance means funds for capital projects. It appears that the funds received by the HC’s cannot be deployed for human capacity development projects such as Scholarships and Skills acquisition endeavors. This is however debatable.

 

4.      Host Communities can forfeit their entitlements

In what can be termed a sinister plot to deprive the HC’s of even this meagre 3% of operating cost allocation, the funds available to the HC’s will be forfeited in the event of “an act of vandalism, sabotage or other civil unrest occurs that causes damage to petroleum and designated facilities or disrupts production activities within the host community” {Sec 257(2) of the PIB}. Innocuous as this provision appears, when it is realized that the HCDT is comprised by nominees of the Settlor and that in most instances of spills and damages to pipelines and other facilities of Operators, the HC’s have always argued that the aged equipment’s of the operators and the lack of maintenance, it becomes clear that the HC’s will always bear the brunt of accusations for vandalism, sabotage and damages to petroleum facilities – and may thus be compelled to forfeit whatsoever was their entitlements under the PIB.

 

If the PIB becomes Law in its present state, the likelihood of HC’s not receiving a dime in the course of any one calendar year, is quite high.

 

5.      Overbearing control by the Settlor

Under the PIB, overwhelming control of the funding, funds, management, operations and structure of the HCDTF is accorded to the Settlor. The Settlor decides how, when, where and who can attend meetings of the HCDT {Sec 234 of the PIB}; the Settlor also provides the sharing formula of HCDT Funds amongst the various HC’s within its operational area {Sec 245 of the PIB}, this could be despite the fact that the HC’s being oftentimes contiguous communities, might have traditional means of sharing joint assets; the Settlor shall decide on what the HC’s need and what can be funded under the HCDTF {Sec 251 (1) and (4) of the PIB}; when the foregoing is added to the powers of the Settlor to determine what constitutes the HC’s entitlements under the PIB; incorporate the HCDT; decide who is appointed a Trustee of the HCDT; decide who can be appointed as a Member of the HCDT Board of Trustees; decide who will be appointed as Secretary of the HCDT and decide who will be appointed Fund Manager to the HCDT; it becomes clear that the communities themselves have very nominal roles to play in the HCDT – the powers, the funds, the staffing, the management of the HCDT are all under the control of the Settlor, and whosoever the Settlor decides to favor.

 

The entity the PIB, as is, protects, empowers and enriches is not the indigenous communities where crude oil operations are conducted/executed, rather it is the Settlor, “a holder of an interest in a petroleum prospecting license or petroleum mining lease whose area of operations is located in or appurtenant to any community or communities”, that turns out to be the primary and sole beneficiary of the PIB

 

6.      Implicit denial of HC’s access to courts to address/resolve disagreements

Under the PIB, HC’s have a maximum of 3 monthsafter the accrual of any cause of action in respect of any such act, neglect or default and provided such act or omission was not done in good faith” to commence any action arising from the implementation of the PIB {Section 307(2) of the PIB}.

 

In addition, HC’s or aggrieved entities can only commence actions under the PIB after the expiry of a 1-month “written notice of the intention to commence the suit” {Section 308(1) of the PIB}.

 

The combined import of Sections 307(2) and 308(1) of the PIB, is that from the time an issue arises between the HC and the Settlor or the NNPC Ltd., the HC has just 2 months to notify the Settlor of their greviance/disagreements, enter into relevant correspondences, hold meetings, retain a Counsel and then issue the statutory 1-month notice of intention to commence action! When it is realized that the Sec 307(2) gives the 3-month period as commencing from ‘the accrual of any cause of action’, and not necessary when the HC becomes aware that they have a cause of action, then it is clear that the 3-month period can actually lapse long before the HC realizes that they have a cause of action.

 

The framers of the PIB could have overreached themselves when they also try to muzzle the Judicial system by inserting provisions which compels Courts to give the Settlor or the NNPC Ltd ‘a 3 months’ notice of the intention to commence execution process’ {Section 308(4) of the PIB}.

 

The provisions geared towards denying HC’s access to courts to enforce their claims or rights is mean-spirited, dubious and likely unconstitutional and void.

 

7.      Vesting on Lands

The Nigerian Constitution vests all lands in any State of Nigeria in the State Governors (for lands in urban areas) and in the Local Government authorities (for lands in rural areas) {Section 1 of the Land Use Act, which by Section 315(5) of the Nigerian Constitution, is an integral aspect of the Constitution of the Federal Republic}

 

The PIB commences with a proclamation in its very first section to the effect that The property and ownership of petroleum within Nigeria and its territorial waters, continental shelf and exclusive economic zone is vested in the Government of the Federation of Nigeria” {Section 1 of the PIB}.

 

The Constitution of Nigeria provides that any other law in conflict with constitutional provisions, is deemed void to the extent of such inconsistency. To the extent that it vests lands in an authority distinct from where the Constitution vests lands, Sec. 1 of the PIB is deemed void.

 

In reality, all Licenses or authorizations to Settlors and Oil companies, issued to such third parties by the Government of the Federation of Nigeria can actually be deemed as unconstitutional and void.  

 

8.      Conclusion:

From the description of what constitutes a HC, to the meager sum allowable to HC’s, and further depletion of the said meagre sum to enable HC’s access only 75% of the said 3% in any given financial year, to provisions which empower the Settlor entities powers to control and manage the HCDTF’s, it is clear that the Host Communities have been terribly short-changed by the PIB as passed by the National Assembly.

 

The PIB, if signed into law, will merely give legal backing to an instrument that is geared to further destabilize the Host Communities, create friction in the oil producing region and very likely foster a cantankerous environment that will not be suitable for meaningful, peaceful petroleum industry operations in Nigeria’s oil and gas rich territories.

 

The President of the Federal Republic is humbly urged to veto the PIB, return same to the National Assembly and urge for more respect and representation from the Host Communities towards ensuring that their needs are met in line with the global best practices in the oil and gas sector regarding addressing the interests and needs of Host Communities.




Monday, October 26, 2020

#EndSARS - The #LekkiMassacre: Call for International Commission of Inquiry

 by Eze Eluchie

 

After over two weeks of continuous street protests by Nigerian youths seeking three key demands, to wit: 1) proscription of the dreaded Special Anti-Robbery Squad {SARS} of the Nigeria Police Force which had been implicated in several cases of extra-judicial murders, extortion and dehumanizing/degrading treatment of civilians; 2) Action against Corruption which had become endemic in Government; and 3) Enthronement of Good Governance at all stratas of governance in Nigeria, the peaceful nature of the protests was brought to a most brutal end by 18.50pm on Tuesday, 20th October 2020, when a continuing staccato of live ammunition fired into the crown by Military personnel, sent the crowd of young protesters in a frenzied stampede, with several killed and scores injured.

 

The brazenness of the attacks had stupefied the protesting crowd, who least expected Nigerian soldiers to openly fire at unarmed Nigerians, who were peacefully protesting for the betterment of the country. 

 

In the ensuing confusion, the scene of the shooting was, in a jiffy, emptied of the mammoth crowd of protesters, with survivors trying to help one another, and hospitals in the vicinity overwhelmed with survivors suffering various forms of injuries. In Television reports following the crackdown, the shooting at the Lekki Toll-gates continued to reverberate in the background.

 

As news of the brutal crackdown went round the city and the country, youths across the country trooped out in their hundreds of thousands to confront authority, unleashing the worst scene of national violence since the current experimentation with democratic governance ensured in 1999. From Lagos, Osogbo, Port Harcourt, Calabar, Benin City, Onitsha, Enugu and Aba in the South, to Jos, Jalingo, Yobe, Kano and Kaduna in the Northern region, an orgy of violence enveloped Nigeria, leaving in its wake looting sprees, mob lynching’s, mass destruction of government and private properties, particularly the burning and destruction of several police station. Conservative reports put the total number of those killed at over 60 persons with properties amounting to several billions of dollars destroyed or looted.

 

Worrisome order of events

In assessing the events which took place at Lekki tollgate in the evening of the 20th of October 2020, it is important to appreciate and recognize key occurrences of the day. These are as follows:

1.      In the morning of the said 20th October, the Governor of Lagos State, Mr. Sanwo-olu issued a statement declaring a night time curfew across Lagos State. This statement clearly sought to provide a legal basis for the deployment of force to evacuate the #EndSARS protesters who had been at the Lekki Tollgates and at the Lagos State Government Secretariat, non-stop, for almost two weeks.

2.      Nigeria’s Federal Government owned media muzzling agency, the Nigeria Broadcasting Commission (NBC) issued an ominous Press Statement warning media outlets and users of social media to be extremely careful on how they report the #EndSARS protests, promising dire consequences for ‘infractions’. A media blackout may have been envisaged via the NBC’s Statement.

3.      Close Circuit Television Camera’s (CCTVs) at the Lekki Tollgate were ominously dismantled – giving indication that someone somewhere had a foreknowledge that events that ought not be recorded were likely going to unfold;

4.      A convoy of soldier arrived at the Lekki tollgate shortly after 18.00 hrs – after the curfew announced earlier in the day by the State Governor ought to have commenced;

5.      Power supply to the Lekki tollgate was suddenly switched off;

6.      The shootings began.

 

Clearly, from the foregoing, there was premeditation of the events that was to unfold and shock not just Nigerians, but the entire international community.

 

Nigeria had just produced its own version of the Tiananmen Square.

 

The Cover-up?

As expected, within 24 hours of the beastly attack, the spokesperson of the Nigeria Army, issued a Press Release denying Army involvement in the shooting and attendant killings and injuries. A few hours later, the Lagos State Government, announced plans to set up a Judicial Panel of Inquiry to investigate the incident.

 

In the midst of the violence, the Nigerian ruler, Muhammadu Buhari, whose silence over the attack by security men at the Lekki tollgate had been condemned by well-meaning Nigerians, made a lackluster National Broadcast during which he did not even mention the carnage that took place at the Lekki tollgate.

 

In an incredulous stroke of folly, during a visit of a delegation of politicians led by the Minister of Works and comprised of several State Governors and Lawmakers, the Minister of Works claimed to have ‘discovered’ a hidden camera at the scene of the shooting, which the said Minister claims will be useful to resolving what actually transpired at the venue of the massacre.

 

Need for international panel of inquiry

When one takes into consideration the track record and penchant of the current Nigerian regime with regards to non-implementation, non-compliance and non-adherence to findings of Judicial Commission of Inquiry and interference in the administration of justice as evidenced in the recent unconstitutional removal of the immediate past Chief Justice of Nigeria and the elevation of ‘compliant’ persons to high judicial positions, one is immediately wary of the zeal with which the governments in Nigeria seem willing to set up Judicial Commissions to inquire into matters in which the government itself, and its military, are deemed complicit.

 

Can a panel instituted by a Government which itself is suspected of complicity in heinous acts be trusted to come out with just findings or outcomes?

 

Will justice be seen or deemed to have been served by the outcomes of a panel set up by a party that itself ought to be investigated for its role in the Lekki Tollgate shootings?

 

It is in view of the commonsensical negative answers that the two questions above will naturally elicit and the fact that the acts alleged constitute crimes within the scope of the Rome Statute (to which the Nigerian State is signatory), that it is prudent in the circumstances to call for the establishment of an International Commission of Inquiry into the Lekki Tollgate shootings which took place in Lekki, Lagos State, Nigeria on the 20th of October 2020.

 

Such an International Panel of Inquiry can validly be established under the charter of the International Criminal Court, the United Nations Security Council, the African Union - African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights and the ECOWAS Community Court of the Economic Community of West African States.

 

 

Picture: #EndSARS sign and emoji