Niger Delta leaders reject PIGB, insist on PIB
Caution against repealing 13% derivation, others
• ‘Why governance bill version not acceptable’
Stakeholders in Niger Delta have cautioned President
Muhammadu Buhari against signing the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB),
alleging that it seeks to
privatise the country’s oil and gas assets and to
further impoverish the people of the region.
They warned that any attempt to privatise the oil and gas
assets in the Niger Delta under the guise of the PIGB would reignite the
clamour for resource control.Spokesman of Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), Anabs
Sara-Igbe, said the only oil reform bill that would be acceptable to the people
of the Niger Delta was the original Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) which had
earmarked 10 percent equitable share for the oil producing communities.
He stated that any attempt to repeal the 13 percent
derivation which is constitutional, would reignite the clamour for complete
ownership of all oil and gas resources by the host communities of the Niger
Delta. The stakeholders warned against plans to repeal the Niger Delta
Development Commission Act and abolition of the presidential amnesty programme.
“Amnesty is a security tool to restore peace in the Niger
Delta, so if they joke with that and abolish it and violence returns to the
region, that is their own cup of tea,” he added.Former Group General Manager,
Corporate Planning and Development Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Joseph Ellah, urged President Buhari to resist pressure
to sign the PIGB into law, claiming that it is against national interest.
Ellah described the PIGB as a deliberate privatisation bill
designed to strip Nigeria of all her oil and gas assets and to impoverish the
oil-producing states of the country.He stated that every discerning mind who
had critically studied the PIGB would know that its sole objective is to
completely transfer the oil and gas assets of the federation to a few wealthy
individuals waiting for the unbundling of the NNPC which would pave the way for
them to capture the oil and gas resources of the nation.
“If the president signs the PIGB, he signs himself, the
Ministry of Petroleum Resources and Nigeria’s oil and gas away. The PIGB is a
privatisation bill. Do Nigerians realise that the PIGB is aimed at selling off
all the oil and gas assets to private people?” he queried.Ellah argued that
African countries such Zambia and Ghana that privatised their copper and gold
mines are yet to recover from the mistake of selling off their natural
resources. He pointed out that while these natural resources are still in these
nations, they are owned by multinationals which now pay royalty to the
respective national governments.
The former NNPC chief explained that PIGB, if signed into
law, would drastically reduce the revenue accruable to the Federal Government,
states, particularly, the oil-producing ones.
“If you sell off the oil and gas where will you get 13
percent derivation from? The Niger Delta states and the Federal Government will
depend mainly on royalty. The 13 percent derivation is based on sales of crude.
If they sell off the crude oil and gas assets, that will be the end of 13
percent derivation,” he said.President of Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Eric Omare,
urged the proponents of abolition of the NDDC Act to bear in mind that it is a
special law aimed at tackling development challenges of the Niger Delta.
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