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Buhari Visits Ghana For Bilateral Talks

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President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari will today visit Ghana as part of his efforts to deepen relations with the West African country.

According to presidential spokesperson, Femi Adesina, the President will meet with his counterpart, Dramani Mahama, for discussions on bilateral relations, including security and economic ties.

“The President is also expected to meet with members of the Nigerian community in Ghana and entrepreneurs before returning to Abuja on Monday evening,” Adesina said.

The President will be accompanied by the National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno, a retired Major-General, and permanent secretaries in the ministries of Foreign Affairs, Defence, Justice and Trade, Industry and Investment.

Since becoming President, Buhari has made boosting Nigeria’s relations with other countries a cardinal point. One of his first official assignments was visiting Chad and Niger for talks on security before attending a G-7 meeting in Germany, followed by his invitation by U.S. President, Barack Obama.

Abandoned, Bomb Blast Victims Cry For Help

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Bomb blast victims

Victims of bomb blasts across the country cry out for help having seemingly been abandoned by the government

By Tosin Omoniyi

As she speaks of her travails, she intermittently wipes off the tears trickling down her cheeks. At a point, she could not restrain her emotions any more as she wailed, the tears no longer dripping but pouring.

Looking at the reporter apologetically, she sniffles and makes a poor attempt at smiling.

“I am not usually like this. I am an independent woman who takes on challenges as they come, but at times, one cannot help but give in to emotions especially when the life of a small girl is involved,” she says, unsuccessfully using her calloused hands to wipe off a new wave of tears threatening to fall from her eyes.

The small girl whom Favor Ndubisi Duke referred to was her six year old daughter who was killed in the bomb explosion that rocked Abuja’s Emab Plaza in June 2014. Favour also lost her husband in that tragedy.

A month before the 34 year-old anguish – stricken mother lost her husband and child, they had buried her mother-in-law, whose death had thrown the entire family into agony as a result of its unexpected nature and the huge expenses they incur burying her.

Just as the family was recovering from that sorrow, the latest tragedy struck, perhaps, eternally taking away Duke’s smiles. She still remembers the day as if it were yesterday, she says.

“We just finished a week long fast. I was at home that day expecting my husband to return so we could go to church together for the evening service. When he didn’t come on time, I decided to prepare for church with the hope that he would join me there. He never came back,” she narrates.

“I now live from hand to mouth. I can hardly feed my young girl. Sometimes I feel like just giving up but I can’t when I look at the face of this young girl. Even my husband’s family has deserted us. The church can only do the little it can. My daily concern is how to fend for my daughter and it is getting increasingly difficult,” she says.

Duke is an unemployed banking and finance graduate and the death of her husband has made matters even worse as she now has to rely on a fledgling daycare business she had just started, with only one child.

While Duke’s case may appear to be really sad, at least she is lucky to still be alive. After all, as they say, when there is life, there is hope.

But for Hope Musa, there is no such thing as hope as her voice has been permanently silenced. An indigene of Taraba State, Musa who was badly injured by the blast at Emab died a few weeks ago after fruitless efforts to get the required finance to take care of his mounting medical bills.

Friends who were close to Musa said the soft spoken victim died with his heart full of bitterness and deep resentment against a country he felt had abandoned him. He had unsuccessfully sought for funds to finance vital surgeries that would have saved his life.

Olamide Omotayo, 30, another victim of the blast and a mother of three is among the lucky ones as the price she has to pay for being at the scene of the blast is a slight limp as a result of injuries sustained on her hip.

But she still wakes up in the middle of the night terrified obviously still unable to get over the horrific experience of April 14, even more than a year after the blast.

She still needs to undergo a couple of surgeries but fears that financial challenges may eventually hinder her chances of fully recovering from the effect of the blast.

Omotayo, who nearly lost her life in the April 14, 2014 Nyanya bus station explosion, still recalls the day vividly.

“I was about to board a bus when the blast occurred. It was just a few minutes after 6am. All I heard was the blast and the next thing I discovered was that I was meters away, sitting on the bare ground with people screaming all around me. How I still held unto my bag, I don’t know till date,” she says, with a slight smile.

At the time of the blast, Omotayo was still breastfeeding her youngest child, who was then just few weeks old. After the blast, she was hospitalized for about six weeks at the National Hospital, Abuja, where the Federal Capital Territory Administration, FCTA, took care of her medical bills. Even then, she still had to spend an extra N100, 000 to undergo surgeries which were not paid for by the FCTA.

“As I speak with you, I still have shrapnel lodged in the hip which hinders my smooth movement. I still pay for medical treatment months after I was discharged. The blast also affected my ability to work fully and I now rely solely on what my husband brings home for our sustenance,” she adds.

Her husband, Sefiu, is however grateful that his wife survived the horrible incident even though he observed that the government had not done enough to alleviate the sufferings of the victims.

“The government said they would support the victims with money to take care of their injuries and assist them get back on their feet. But, as I speak with you, apart from the support received from the FCT, the federal government appears not to have done much to help these people,” he said.

Musa Baba, another victim no longer hears clearly as a result of injuries sustained in his ears during the bomb blast that rocked Suleja, Niger State on April, 11, 2011. He recalls that he was in the company of fellow youth corps members, at the offices of the Independent National Electoral Office, INEC, when the bomb went off.

Baba who showed our reporter a ragged scar on one of his legs told www.icirnigeria.org that he was lucky to be alive. He said medical doctors had given him three options on how he could recover his hearing. “One is to allow time to heal the ears. Two is to use hearing aid and the third option is to operate on it. But how do I get the funds to do that?” he wonders.

He says that government has not done enough to help the victims, forcing many of them to resign themselves to fate.

“I had to sell my property and plots of land to treat myself. My family members and friends also helped me out,” he said.

Victims of bomb blast in July took their fate in their hands and came together to form the Bomb Victims Association of Nigeria, BVAN, in order to effectively support one another and equally have a united front to present their case to relevant authorities.

The group at a press briefing in late July organized to draw attention to members’ plight raised a lot of questions about the Victims Support Fund, VSF, launched in August last year by former President Goodluck Jonathan.

Kayode Olatunji, leader of the group, said BVAN had been registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission, CAC, holds meetings regularly in Abuja and had been able to secure the support of the National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, through its erstwhile chairman, Chidi Odinkalu.

Olatunji who is a victim of one of the blasts in Suleja said he still suffers severe ear impairment but he cannot go for necessary surgery due to lack of funds.

He said BVAN membership cuts across different ethnic and religious groups, adding that its members were all victims of the various Boko Haram-related bombings that occurred in Nigeria, including the October 2010 bombing of the Eagle Square in Abuja; the United Nations House blast of August 2011; the December 2010 blast at Mogadishu Barracks; the 2011 blast at the catholic church in Madalla, among many other such explosions across the country.

“As a result of prolonged neglect of the victims of this bomb blasts across Northern Nigeria, some of us who initially survived the bombings have died, many due to little or no medical care attention and others as a result of their inability to continue to pay their medical bills or further their treatment here in Nigeria or abroad,” he said.

He added that most of their members suffer from several types of ailments with varying degrees of severity, including first-degree burns, cornea opacity, compound fractures, tympanic membrane as well as intensive nerve and tissue injuries.

Odinkalu, who was instrumental to the founding of the bomb victims association said that he advised the members to come together and call attention to their problems after he realized that government was probably not interested in doing anything for them.

“The issues raised went to the heart of the primary duty of government. I tried to make representations but determined early enough that official priorities were probably different. In my view, the only way to make progress was to get them organised as an advocacy body and mutual support initiative,” he observed.

The Jonathan administration had in July 2014 set up the Theophilus Danjuma-led Victims Support Fund, VSF, to mobilize funds for victims of insurgency and Boko Haram terror activities all over the country.

In August 2014, at an elaborate fundraising dinner, the Fund raised over N80bn which was intended for disbursement to the affected victims. Jonathan said the fundraising was part of the government’s efforts to raise funds so that those widowed and orphaned as well as those whose businesses, homes and places of worship had been vandalized could be catered for.

However, many of the victims who spoke to www.icirnigeria.org, including officials of BVAN say they are yet to receive anything out of the funds raised to assist them.

All attempts to get the reaction of the Executive Director, Nigerian Foundation for the Support of Victims of Terrorism also known as the Victim Support Fund, VSF, Sunday Ochoche, proved abortive, as his cellphones were switched off for over three days. A text message sent to his cellphone was also not responded to.

Last week, the Fund announced that it was giving N10, 000 cash gifts to 410 pregnant women at the Internally Displaced Persons, IDP, camp in Maiduguri, capital of Borno State.

Speaking at the presentation at the Government House, Maiduguri, Ochoche said that the cash gift was to complement the efforts of the state government and the National Emergency Management Agency, NEMA.
It would also be recalled that VSF last month said it had commenced issuing cheques to “deserving hospitals” for the treatment of the victims of the bombing by Boko Haram. It said the first seven hospitals selected were issued with cheques of N20 million each to treat victims under their care. A memorandum of understanding was equally said to have been signed between the VSF and the selected health facilities.

The University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, UMTH, and the State Specialist Hospital, Maiduguri, were among hospitals selected, while other hospitals in Yobe, Adamawa and Gombe states were also said to have been given funds to treat victims of the insurgency.

But the N20 million given to seven hospitals would amount to N140 million, still a far cry from more than N80 billion the Fund realized at its launch.

Ochoche, who signed the MoU on behalf of the federal government, said the funds were aimed at assisting the hospitals treat victims of bomb blasts under their care, adding that the Fund would deploy more funds to the various hospitals selected as soon as those pledges made during the fundraising dinner were redeemed.

“The decision of the VSF is to make sure that all these hospitals are assisted to perform at their minimum best in treatments and taking care of all victims of Boko Haram attacks in the affected states of Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Gombe, Plateau, and Taraba in the North East sub-region of this country,” he stated.

“We at the Victims Support Funds are aware that we cannot meet all the challenges that your hospitals face in the treatment of victims of terror attacks, however, the presentation that we are making is to assist you deliver better services to victims of terror attacks that are usually brought to your hospitals,” Ochoche further said during the presentation of the cheques.

The VSF chief said that about N24 billion has so far been received by the Fund. The Premium Times also reported that Danjuma had during a meeting in July told President Muhammadu Buhari, that out of the N55.92 billion pledged at the fund-raising dinner in August 2014, only N23.33 billion had been redeemed; about N33.54 billion was yet to be redeemed, including the N5 billion pledged by the Federal Government.

President Buhari directed the Head of Service of the Federation, Danladi Kifasi, to facilitate the immediate release of the N5 billion pledged by the past administration and it was confirmed last week that the government had redeemed the pledge. It was also confirmed that the banking and finance sector too had redeemed up to N2 billion it pledged.

One of the big questions being asked by blast victims is why the funds currently sitting in four different banks had not been disbursed to those in dire need of them. BVAN’s secretary, Musa Audu, said there are many questions he hopes would be answered when the association is formally launched this month in Abuja.

“We intend to invite President Muhammadu Buhari and all the 36 state governors and other prominent people in Nigeria to the launching. We don’t need to be told what bomb victims are going through. We were victims ourselves. BVAN will be the voice of the voiceless and, if possible, handle issues of all bomb victims nationwide. We hope BVAN will be properly funded. We intend to work alongside NEMA and other relevant agencies,” he said.

Odinkalu is hopeful that the association would be able to galvanise support for its members from government and grow to become an entity that can initiate and fund programmes for the benefit of bomb victims.

“The Association is now incorporated and its trustees are up and running. We’re working on helping them get an office and getting members of the association to get it going with programmes on mutual support, rehabilitation, trauma support, care and counselling. We’re looking for volunteers psychologists, doctors, orthopaedic surgeons, to help with different kinds of care,” he stated.

However, even while the victims embark on this self-help effort, Odinkalu insists that the government must fulfil its promises to them, particularly since it has raised money for that purpose.

“My personal view is that a Victims Support Fund has to be seen to fully involve and integrate victims and their representatives in its priorities and programmes. That is not yet the case in our situation,” he said.

African Defence Chiefs Meet Over Security Concens

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AU Defence Chiefs

Defence chiefs from several African countries are meeting in Bamako, capital of Mali, to discuss the insecurity affecting some countries on the continent, particularly the threat posed by Boko Haram in the Lake Chad Basin Commission and Al Shabab in Central Africa.

Nigeria’s defence chief, Gabriel Olonisakin, who is attending the meeting, is expected to brief his counterparts from other countries on how Nigeria has responded, with the help of its allies, to the Boko Haram insurgency, including the imminent deployment of a Multinational Joint Task Force.

In a statement released by Nigeria’s defence spokesperson, Rabeh Abubakar, a Colonel, the meeting, which is on-going, is expected to bring the continent together in the fight against terrorism and other security challenges.

“In order to promote a shared assessment of the threats risks in the affected regions, the meeting proposed to classify the threats and risks in the regions into four major categories which include; Terrorism, Organized Crime (Drugs, Arms and Human Trafficking), Illegal Immigration and Separatism,” the statement read.

Another Bayelsa Monarch Kidnapped

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Photo: www.nigerianeye.com
Photo: www.nigerianeye.com

Armed men in the early hours of Friday abducted, Benjamin Weke, the 85 year-old paramount ruler of Gbarantoru in Yenagoa local government area of Bayelsa State, at his residence.

The spokesman of the Bayelsa State Police Command, Asinim Butswatt, confirmed the incident, saying that the monarch’s family could not make contact with the police until about 5am.

“The marine component of the police has been alerted. They are combing the creeks to find their whereabouts‎.” Butswat said.

It would be recalled that only two weeks ago, two Chiefs from Okpoama community in Brass local Government area, Blessing Wagio and Isaac Akono-Igolo, were kidnapped and N50 million demanded by their kidnappers for their release.

Family sources said the abduction of the Bayelsa monarch was preceded by a notice of his planned kidnapping in a letter reportedly sent to him by his abductors.

Blessing Weke, a member of the family confirmed that the gunmen had on July 1, 2015 sent a letter to the monarch, intimating him of their intention to kidnap him.


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“The gunmen were about four in number and heavily armed. They came around 1.00 am and forcefully gained entrance.

“They immediately seized him and took some money meant for the traditional marriage of his sons scheduled to hold on Saturday.

“They also beat up the wife who later escorted them through the footpath behind his residence to the waterside where they escaped in a speedboat to an unknown location,” Weke said.

Buhari, Osinbajo Declare Assets Publicly

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President PMB

President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, in keeping with their promise to make their assets public within their first 100 days in office, have made known to the public the content of their asset declaration.

In a statement released by Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, while the Buhari had a bank balance of N30 million in his only bank account with Union Bank and shares in Berger Paints, Union Bank and Skye Bank, Osinbajo had N90 million, $900, 000 and £19, 000 and shares in MTN Nigeria, Octogenerium Ltd, Windsor Grant Ltd, Tarapolsa, Vistorion Ltd, and Aviva Ltd.

The President’s seven declared houses included two mud houses in Daura, which he inherited from his father and older sister, two houses in Kaduna, one each in Abuja, Kano and Daura. He also had two undeveloped lands in Kano and Port Harcourt.

Buhari and Osinbajo's declared assets. Photo: punchng.com
Buhari and Osinbajo’s declared assets. Photo: punchng.com

Buhari’s farm in Daura has an Orchard and a ranch with economic trees while his animals included 270 cattle, 25 sheep, five horses and a variety of birds. He is also said to have several cars, two of which were bought with his savings and others received from the government as a former head of state.

“The rest were donated to him by well-wishers after his jeep was damaged in a Boko Haram bomb attack on his convoy in July 2014,” She added.

The Vice President, who is a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, SAN, has a law firm, Simmons Cooper, a four-bedroom apartment at the Victoria Garden City, three-bedroom flat in Ikoyi, two-bedroom flat at Redemption Camp, and a mortgaged two-bedroom building in Bedford, England. His vehicles included an Infinity SUV, a Mercedes Benz and a Prado Jeep.

According to Shehu, the Code of Conduct Bureau is yet to vet the declarations but when it does, the documents “will be made public.”

 

Group Advocates More Funding For Nigerian Military

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PIC. SOLDIERS OF 3 ARMOURED DIV., NIGERIA ARMY, PERFORMING RANGE CLASSIFICATION  AT MIANGO RANGE IN JOS ON WEDNESDAY (10/4/13).

By Musdapha Ilo, Maiduguri

A civil liberty advocacy group, the International Association for Advancement and Defence of Human Rights, IAADHR, has called on the federal government to increase the funding of the military to enable it adequately deal with the insurgency ravaging the North east.

The group said if the military is adequately funded it would enhance the troops capacity to combat the insurgency and also boost their morale.

Speaking to journalists in Maiduguri on Thursday, leader of the group, Babatunde Johnson, said that the federal government needs to better equip and increase logistical support to the troops to further step up of the momentum of the war against terror in the region.

“We call on the federal government to increase funding and logistical support to the military and other security agencies towards boosting their morale in the anti terrorism war,” Johnson said.

While commending the government for stepping up the campaign against Boko Haram insurgents, Johnson said it must sustain the current regional and international collaboration aimed at quickly ending the crisis.

“We call on all Nigerians to consciously cooperate and collaborate with security agencies in intelligence sharing towards ensuring the success of the counter terrorism war,” he stated.

He lamented that the insurgency had led to the displacement of about 1.5 million persons from their homes in the affected states, noting that “increasing IDPs camps are springing up with consequent challenges especially in Borno” and that “Boko Haram insurgency has led to massive fracture of the society.”

Johnson urged the federal government to do more in catering to the needs of IDPs, observing that they were facing the hardship of daily living in addition to being uprooted from their homes.

“We must not abandon the fate of those in IDPs camps to their helplessness because to do so is to provide a fertile breeding ground for future terrorists and suicide bombers,” he observed.

“It is also a clear violation of their human rights and dignity as international rules and convention of protocols guiding the displaced persons,” Johnson further opined..

He noted also that the insurgency had also resulted in destruction of schools, hospitals and other government facilities.
 

TMG Launches Election Monitoring Project For Bayelsa Polls

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Photo: tmgng.org
Photo: tmgng.org

 

The Transition Monitoring Group, TMG, has said it is set to deploy the Quick Count election observation methodology for the December 5 governorship poll in Bayelsa State.

While unveiling the Quick Count Project on Thursday in Yenagoa, Ibrahim Zikirullahi, chairman, TMG, said the methodology employs statistical principles as well as sophisticated information technology platforms.

TMG launched the Quick Count Project in Yenagoa before representatives of INEC, civil society groups, media, and TMG volunteers, amongst other stakeholders.

Zikirullahi noted that Quick Count was a parallel vote tabulation method that provides timely and accurate information on the conduct of voting and counting, one that is capable of independently verifying the accuracy of election results.

“TMG is undertaking the Quick Count for the Bayelsa governorship poll to provide voters, candidates, political parties, security agents, INEC and general public with independent information about whether the official results reflect ballots cast at the polling units.

“If INEC’s official results fall within TMG’s estimated range then the public, political parties and candidates should have confidence that official results reflect ballots cast at polling units,” Zikirullahi said.

He said TMG volunteers who would work as observers on the project were drawn from every corner of the state. “TMG observers include men and women, the young, and the elderly, Christians and Muslims.” He said.

Zikirullahi urged INEC to consider extending the period for the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration, CVR, exercise in view of additional challenges posed by the difficult terrain of the coastal communities in Bayelsa State and also urged the electoral body to intensify efforts to overcome the identified logistic lapses towards ensuring no voter was disenfranchised due to challenges in the CVR process.

Also Speaking at the event, Baritor Kpagih, Bayelsa State Resident Electoral Commissioner, REC, noted that election was a multi-stakeholder process but regretted that electoral body was blamed for lapses that were outside its control.

He called on the political parties, security agencies as well as electorates to collaborate with INEC to ensure that the forthcoming elections were violence free and credible.

Immigration Boss Announces Operational Reforms, Talks Tough On Trafficking, Illegal Immigrants

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Comptroller General, NIS, Martins Abeshi. Photo: Daily Trust

Newly appointed Comptroller General of Immigration, CGI, Martns Kure Abeshi, has announced a series of reforms, including border security and engagement with the public through a “Citizen Inclusive Immigration Service”.

Abeshi made this known at inaugural meeting with heads of commands and formations at the Nigeria Immigration Service, NIS, headquarters in Abuja, according to a statement issued on Thursday by Its spokesperson, Chukwuemeka Obua.

On border security, the CGI said the hitherto abandoned Air Border Patrol Unit would be revitalised and restored to its former position as the premier Aerial Border Patrol Unit in the country.

While assuring staff of improved welfare, Abeshi said the Service would not tolerate “sharp practices such as extortion, touting and general staff indiscipline.”

He directed all formations to put in place mechanisms to checkmate activities of human traffickers with a view to bringing an end to the disturbing trade.

The CGI explained that some measures would be put in place to prevent the practice of foreigners, who are non ECOWAS members, coming into the country and staying beyond their permit, adding that an e-pass project under the Trusted Travellers Scheme, TTS, would soon be introduced in partnership with Messrs CONTEC, the company implementing the Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Alien Card, CERPAC, Green card project.

“When the project takes off, all non ECOWAS visitors to Nigeria and who intend to stay in excess of 56 days would be required to register and pay a fee equivalent of $200 while those who over stay their visitors passes in excess of between 90-180 days would pay a penalty of an equivalent of $1000. Those who over stay in excess of 180 days would be required to pay a penalty of equivalent $2000,” he explained.

Timi Alaibe Denies Reports Claiming Rival Died In His House

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Timi Alaibe. Photo: pulse.ng

Former Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, and the All Progressives Congress, APC, gubernatorial candidate in the coming governorship election in Bayelsa state, Timi Alaibe, has debunked news making the rounds that a former chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, in the state, Sam Inokoba, a retired Colonel, died in his Lagos home.

Alaibe made this known in a press statement released on Wednesday, saying he had been in Abuja “since the beginning of the week”.

Inokoba recently left the PDP for the APC, and had picked the governorship nomination form for the forthcoming election in Bayelsa State and was expected to face Alaibe and other candidates in the primary to choose who will represent the party against Governor Seriake Dickson.


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“I want to categorically and honestly state here that I have been in the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Abuja since the beginning of the week and I neither invited our beloved chairman to my house nor anywhere in Lagos State for that matter for any discussions or negotiations about the impending gubernatorial primary of our party in Bayelsa State,” Alaibe said.

He blamed the allegation on those “who see my entry into the governorship race in my state as a big threat to them” and urged journalists to always balance their reports.

Reports in the media had alleged that Inokoba died on Tuesday in Alaibe’s home in Lagos after a heated argument ensued between the two politicians. The argument was ostensibly connected to who would step down for whom among the two politicians who both come from the same local government.

Army Uncovers Unprecedented Oil Bunkering Site Near Rivers Govt House

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An illegal oil refinery. Photo credit: thenewsnigeria.com.ng
An illegal oil refinery. Photo credit: thenewsnigeria.com.ng

 

The Nigerian Army has made a substantial breakthrough in its fight against oil theft, with the uncovering of a huge illegal site near the Nigerian Ports Authority in Port Harcourt, which is described as “unprecedented.”

The Commandant of 2 Brigade Nigerian Army, Stevenson Olabanji, a Brigadier General, told the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN, on Wednesday that a tipoff led to the discovery and the arrest of 13 suspects.

“About 16:40 hours on Monday, we got an information that some illegal bunkering activities were going on along Makoba Beach. On arrival, our personnel discovered illegal activities which involved bunkering of illegally refined petroleum products and lifting of diesel to local boats,” Olabanji said.

Makoba Beach is not far from the Rivers State Government House.

“At the site, we found more than 5,000 drums loaded with illegally refined diesel; four tanker trucks containing 132,000 litres of diesel combined, and a barge with 165,000 litres of stolen diesel.

“This discovery is unprecedented because since we started our operations 10 days ago, this is about the biggest that we have uncovered,” he noted, adding that 150 drums filled with diesel were also discovered in 21 Cotonou boats.

He said despite the Joint Task Force mandate for the destruction of illegal refineries, the site has not yet been set on fire because of its location in the heart of the city.

“Our mandate requires us to destroy the site in situ, but we cannot do this because it will degrade the environment and affect residents since it is situated in the heart of Port Harcourt.

“Our plan is to move them to a safe location for destruction,” he explained.

While restating the resolve of the JTF to take the fight against oil theft to criminals, Olabanji called on Nigerians to provide useful information to help in this regard.