Niger Delta Militants Threaten To Return To Armed Struggle Over Unpaid Allowances
Aggrieved ex-Niger Delta militants have urged the Federal Government of Nigeria to direct the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Amnesty Programme, Brigadier Paul Borih to restore their names in the programme and continue their payments, or face unfavorable consequences in the country.
The ex-agitators made the demand in a letter to the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, which was made available to journalists in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, yesterday.
According to the letter, the group frowned at the unfair treatment meted out to them by the Amnesty Office, by refusing to pay them their monthly allowance since October 2015.
Ikemini Markson, who issued the document on behalf of 56 former Niger Delta agitators, said they were the first batch of the Federal Government Amnesty Programme, and wondered why government suddenly stopped the payment.
Markson further claimed that there were over 300 ex-agitators facing the government’s decision to put on hold payments of their allowances, saying that they had been exposed to unbearable hardship and dehumanization.
He stated: “It is pertinent to note that, we are the rightful beneficiaries of the Federal Government Amnesty Programme’s first batch as captured in the original biometric compilation since its inception in 2009, and recipients of the Programme’s monthly stipends up until October 2015, when our payments were abruptly halted and our names surreptitiously removed.
“It is with utmost pain, but with the greatest sense of responsibility and respect for law and order, that we make this humble letter to you. We are beneficiaries of the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s Presidential Amnesty Programme. We are using this medium to inform you of the irregularities and corruption that has eaten up the vision of our late President, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua.
“Despite all measures to amicably settle this issue through several letters written to the office of the Special Adviser to the President on Amnesty Programme, our members have remained unpaid till this very moment, culminating in over two years of strife, hardship and penury, capable of pushing us into unwholesome practices long forgotten and abandoned by us.
“Our instant burden stems from the cries of woes occasioned upon over 300 of our members, of which only 56 beneficiaries are courageous to defend and fight for our rights.
“The 56 of us are not just ordinary Nigerians; we are, as it was, youths struggling to outlive environmental, social and political despoliation, degradation and other denials emanating from the operations of the extractive industries and multinational oil and gas conglomerates, who have taken over the Niger Delta land, waters and air through activities of flow stations, pipe linings, spillages and gas flares. All of which will not know anything close to abatement soon. Undoubtedly, life is certainly unbearably short and brutal for all of us already,” Markson lamented.
The ex-militants warned: “It is, therefore, a matter of urgent national importance that you intervene expeditiously before this drum full of gunpowder blows up to cause more pains and mayhem to our Niger Delta and nation.
“We, therefore, on behalf of our members, urge you to use your good office to speedily intervene in this deplorable situation and ensure the prompt payment of our outstanding monthly stipends and restoration of our names back to the Amnesty Programme by directing the office of the Special Adviser on Amnesty as soon as possible, as we are also open for negotiation and peace.”
Source: Breaking Times