Tuesday 22 March 2016

Beyond the rhetoric of the Ogoni clean-up BY Majiri Oghene Etemiku

Beyond the rhetoric of the Ogoni clean-up
A certain poet once said that if you were alive and young during the French Revolution of 1789, the feeling you got was a feeling akin to having gone straight to heaven, without the trouble of having to die first. There was also a revolution in the Niger Delta in the early 90s; and that kind of French enthusiasm would have been our lot if things did not go as awry as they went eventually. Working hand in glove and marching as if to war with the, then, Mobile Police Force, MFP, of Nigeria, Shell BP unleashed such force and brutality on innocent and defenceless civilians who protested Shell insensitivity at the havoc that oil prospecting and exploration exacted on the yams and cassava farms and fish ponds in Uzere, Ozoro and Olomoro.
There were allegations that after General Abacha killed Saro-Wiwa via a Kangaroo verdict, he ordered his body to be doused with acid. But, of course, Wiwa became a martyr for the cause of the environment, mostly because, in spite of entreaties from world leaders and environmentalists, matters still took the turn they took. It was not a surprise, therefore, that the rest of the world hit Abacha with sanctions and kicked us out of the Commonwealth.
But a few months after the execution of Saro-Wiwa, Shell began to make overtures to the Ogoni with ‘A Plan of Action for Ogoni’. Shell offered to clean up all the oil spills in the Niger Delta and rehabilitate some of its community projects. But they had to abandon all such plans when a former Shell head of environmental studies, a Bopp Van Dessel, revealed that Shell was not really interested in the so-called clean up. It became clear that the supposed ‘A Plan of Action for Ogoni’ was just a ruse and a diversionary tactic by Shell to rev its engine, and go right ahead with its plan of a $3.8 billion liquid natural gas project in Nigeria.
So, if after twenty years after a broken revolution, somebody suddenly wakes up without a thorough plan of what the proposed Ogoni Clean-up plan is all about, I am not joining the bandwagon at the market square to cheer and clap; you may have to forgive me. Instead of being giddy, I am curious: why is it that the Federal Government is taking responsibility for the clean-up, when Shell had in the past, made an offer to clean up the polluted lands in the Niger Delta? What happened all these years to the ‘A Plan of Action for Ogoni’, by Shell in 1996 to clean up Ogoniland? Why are ‘stakeholders’ – the United Nations, states affected by the oil spills in the Niger Delta, involved in the contribution of N2billion to the clean-up trust fund, where Shell, together with other oil companies can foot the bill?

In 2010, an explosion took place off the coast of Mexico on an oil rig. It was known then as the worst environmental disaster in US history. After the explosion took 11 lives, 4.2 million barrels of oil, together with a dangerous gas known as methane, flowed fast and furious, one mile below the surface of the sea for 87 days. Environmentalists told the world that the effects of that spill would last for generations and generations, and that it would take only five years for the effects of that oil exploration disaster to begin to manifest. Five years after the explosion on that rig, Shell has spent over $26billion cleaning up the areas directly affected.
In 2012, after the Niger Delta was sacked by floods, a study carried by the Africa Network for Environment & Economic Justice, ANEEJ, and supported by the Norwegian government titled ‘Natural Disaster Management Strategies in the Niger Delta Region of Nigeria’, recommended that the first thing to do is a declaration of Ogoni land as an ecological disaster zone. The report, published in 2013, also asked government to commission an assessment of the entire Niger Delta environment and, indeed, of areas affected with issues of desertification and erosion. According to the authors of the report, ‘Shell should be ordered to, urgently, dismantle whatever remains of their facilities in Ogoni land, along with toxic wastes they dumped in the territory…’
These are valid recommendations; but in the light of the incident of 2010 in the Gulf, together with the NIMET warning to residents living around coastal cities in the Niger Delta to leave, it wouldn’t be out of place for our government to put strong pressure on Shell, the Oil Companies and the NNPC to begin to look at how to permanently solve lingering issues of flooding, degradation and pollution in the Niger Delta. Unless we do that, we may as well just find out that the motive behind this sudden interest in cleaning up Ogoniland is no different from the ‘Ogoni Plan of Action’ embarked upon by Shell in 1996.

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