Thursday, June 19, 2025
24.8 C
Lagos

Niger Delta Amnesty Programme: Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow!

The Niger Delta Amnesty Programme is still on course! That was the good news every citizen of the Niger Delta region, concerned Nigerians and multinationals in the oil & gas sector wanted to hear from the Seat of Power in Abuja.

That good news came via presidential statement announcing retired Brigadier-General Paul Boroh as the New Co-ordinator of the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme. He replaced Kingsley Kuku.

Before that announcement, there was understandable concern and uncertainty over the fate of the programme under the Buhari administration following the conclusion of the 2015 general elections in which the Niger Delta voted enmasse for former President Goodluck Jonathan, an indigene of the Niger Delta region.

Yesterday
Looking back, one would naturally commend former President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua for taking the right decision on June 25, 2009 to proclaim a 60-day unconditional amnesty period for militants in the Niger Delta region, in an attempt to resolve peacefully, the militancy crisis in the region.

The terms of the programme was for the militants to renounce violence, lay down their arms and surrender such arms to the authorities
unconditionally. In return, the federal government agreed to initiate an amnesty programme to rehabilitate and train the ex-militants on various vocational/career modules in Nigeria and other selected countries abroad.

At the beginning of the amnesty programme, an estimated 30, 000 ex-militants signed on for the rehabilitation and training scheme, while
the life-span of the programme was pegged at five years.

Again, looking back, the amnesty programme did not come as a form of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) by the federal government. Rather, the government was forced to initiate it when it became obvious that Military Might by the federal authorities was not stemming the daily bloodshed, criminal acts of kidnappings and attendant ransoms, but more importantly, loss of vital revenue from declining oil production and export as a result of the militancy in the region.

Thankfully, both the militants and federal government duly accepted the programme, leading to disarmament and surrender of weapons by the ex-militants, and eventual commencement of their rehabilitation, integration and training on various areas of career.
Niger Delta Amnesty Programme: August 10-16, 2015

Today
Now, what is the situation today? Before the advent of the Buhari administration, the amnesty programme itself was winding up gradually, counting in its successes, thousand of ex-militants that benefitted from the programme in several ways, both in cash and training.

But during the same period, the programme itself was also generating heated debate in the polity in respect of one crucial element: payment
of billions of Naira to certain militant warlords to allegedly protect oil pipelines from vandalisation on the premise that the ex-militants were better suited to protect oil pipelines running through the creeks.

As various figures allegedly paid to the militant warlords in Naira and Dollars for the pipeline protection contract became public knowledge, issues were being raised as follows:

Why should the federal government hand over the security of oil pipelines to ex-militants for protection, rather than security agencies? Who protected the pipelines before the advent of militancy in the Niger Delta?

How long will this contract last? Was the protection contract not an admission of failure of security by the federal government?

Expectedly, the pipeline protection contract became a controversial issue. It was therefore not surprising when on assumption of office on
May 29, 2015, President Muhammadu Buhari quickly cancelled the entire pipeline protection contract regime.

The cancellation then gave the impression that Buhari was about to cancel the entire amnesty programme in totality. However, the appointment of Boroh has soothed frayed nerves in that regard.

Tomorrow
What would be the fate of the amnesty programme going forward? Tomorrow, they’d say, is pregnant-it could produce anything. For now, the first game plan should be for the ex-militants to benefit as much as possible from the amnesty programme while it lasts.

The second part is the issue of infrastructural development of the Niger Delta region as Phase 11 of the amnesty programme. It is not in doubt that oil productio has wrecked havoc on Niger Delta lands in form of environmental degradation, lost earnings by fishermen and farmers as a result of oil spill on rivers and waterways and health hazards on the citizens.

Tackling these challenges as Phase 11 of the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme will generate more goodwill for the federal government in the region, ensure sustainable peace and stability, and create an enabling environment for oil multinationals to operate seamlessly in the region.

At the end, the federal government will reap more revenue from oil and gas production and export as dividend. For the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme, we wait for tomorrow with bated breath!

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Book Presentation: GOCOP Seeks to Sanitise Online Journalism, Set Standards

The President of the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers...

Chain Reactions Africa Clinches Top Honours as Nigeria’s Most Celebrated PR Firm at SABRE Awards

L-R: Israel Opayemi, MD/Chief Strategist, Chain Reactions Africa; Arik...

PenCom to Newspaper Owners: Clear N720m Pension Debt

From Left: The Director General of the National Pension...

Execution of Oloibiri Museum Project to Commence as Promoters Hand over Site to Julius Berger

Officials of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board...

Topics

N300m Insurance Rebranding Project Stirs Market

The N300 million rebranding project by the insurance industry...

TotalEnergies, Air France-KLM Sign MoU for 10-Year Supply of Aviation Fuel

TotalEnergies and Air France-KLM have signed a Memorandum of...

Sustainability of CPS Key to Thriving Pension Sector – Absa

Absa, a leading pan-African bank with a strong footprint...

SYNLAB, Others Provide Free Medicals to Indigent Nigerians

Synlab, formerly PathCare Laboratories, in partnership with Classic FM...

ADB Endorses $400bn Project to Transform Agriculture in Africa

The African Development Bank (AfDB) recently endorsed its “Feed...

NIA Chiefs at 23rd Nigerian Economic Summit 2017

R-L: Mr. Eddy Efekoha, Chairman, Nigerian Insurers Association (NIA)...

MTN Will Not Pay N1.O4O Tr NCC Fine

MTN Nigeria says it will not pay a dime...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img