bus crushes victims

ACN urges suspension of night buses

Following Tuesday's gruesome attack on passengers near Lokoja, the Action Congress has called for a ban on night journeys until the security situation improves.

The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) has urged the relevant authorities to work with luxury bus operators to suspend night travel by road. This is coming after 14 passengers of a luxury bus were reportedly crushed to death as they were being attacked by armed robbers along the Okene-Lokoja road in the early hours of Tuesday.

In a statement issued in Ado-Ekiti, Ekiti State, yesterday by its spokesperson, Lai Mohammed, the party said suspending such night journeys may be necessary to save the precious lives which are being lost frequently in similar armed robberies.

The ACN said while it is aware that the Federal Road Safety Corps has been advising travellers against night trips in view of safety concerns, it may be necessary for the organisation to go a step further by working with the luxury bus operators to stop night travels until there is adequate security on the roads.

The party also called on the federal government to act urgently to ensure the security of lives and property, saying security, along with welfare, is the raison d'etre of any government.

The party said on the same day that the heartless armed robbers put the hapless passengers on harm's way along the Okene-Lokoja road, another group of armed robbers used explosives to blow up a bank in Ilesha, Osun state, forcing all banks in the town to close shop.

"These are just a few recent cases in a series of armed attacks against ordinary Nigerians across the country. No government worth its salt will sit back and allow armed gangs to take over its roads and towns, as if we are living in a failed state," Mohammed said.

He expressed shock and disbelief at the sheer horror of the incident along the Okene-Lokoja road, in which passengers were made to lie face down on the road, only for oncoming vehicles to run over them.

"A similar mass death, caused by robbers who attacked a passenger bus, was said to have occurred in the past, even though it was denied by the authorities. Whatever happens, we should never allow this horrific incident to happen again in our country, even when we seem to have now become so numb that news of such deaths only dominate the media for a few days before disappearing from the headlines," Mohammed said.

The party commended the Kogi state governor, Ibrahim Idris, for promptly visiting the survivors of the attack in the hospital, and offering to foot the bill for their treatment, saying such show of concern by people in positions of authority could be a soothing balm at times like this.

The party commiserated with the families of the victims, saying the only way to ensure they did not die in vain is to prevent a recurrence.

Source: Dailytimesng

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UN: Widespread oil damage found in Nigeria delta

LAGOS, Nigeria -- A region of Nigeria's oil-rich southern delta suffers widespread ecological damage as spilled oil seeps into its drinking water, destroys plants and remains in the ground for decades at a time, according to a United Nations report released Thursday.

The report, released by the U.N.'s environmental program, said it will take as much as 30 years to clean the oil-stained Ogoniland area within Nigeria's Niger Delta, a region of swamps, mangroves and creeks almost the size of South Carolina. The world body suggested the Nigerian government and the oil industry set up an initial $1 billion trust fund for the cleanup.

However, environmental cleanup remains an afterthought in Africa's most populous nation as oil revenues fund a bloated and corrupt government dependent on production. Cleaning up the more than 600-mile (more than 965-kilometer) region would be a challenge for any government, the U.N. acknowledged.

"The environmental restoration of Ogoniland could prove to be the world's most wide-ranging and long-term oil cleanup exercise ever undertaken if contaminated drinking water, land, creeks and important ecosystems such as mangroves are to be brought back to full, productive health," the body said in a statement.

Though production in Ogoniland stopped in 1993, pipelines and flowstations operated by a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell PLC ( RDSA - news people ) and the state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. still run through villages and fields.

Oil spills from those sites, caused by aging pipelines and vandalism, have thoroughly damaged lands, the U.N. found. In one case, the U.N. found a village where drinking water was polluted with benzene 900 times more than the international limit. The U.N. also found one area where an oil spill 40 years ago hadn't been cleaned.

"The Ogoni people live with this pollution every minute of every day, 365 days a year," the report said. "Since average life expectancy in Nigeria is less than 50 years, it is a fair assumption that most members of the current Ogoniland community have lived with chronic oil pollution throughout their lives."

The report also said that children born in Ogoniland are affected by the oil pollution daily, "as the odor of hydrocarbons pervades the air day in, day out."

Some environmentalists say as much as 550 million gallons of oil have poured into the Niger River Delta during 50 years of production - at a rate roughly comparable to one Exxon Valdez disaster per year. Even today, oil laps up in brackish delta creeks in Ogoniland, creating a black ring around the coastlines.

Shell helped fund the U.N. investigation, leading to criticism by some environmentalists that the report wouldn't take on the oil giant many demonize in the region. The report said damage can be caused by failing oil pipelines, as well as by thieves who tap into the lines to steal crude oil - a worsening problem in Ogoniland. The report said U.N. officials saw such theft during the day and suggested there could be "collusion" with government officials.

"It was not within (the U.N.'s) scope to identify the cause of the individual spills, nor is it scientifically possible to detect the original cause of spills after an unknown time period," the report said.

It also remains difficult for companies to operate in the delta, as criminal gangs and militants still operate and take foreign workers hostage for ransom. The U.N. report noted that it had trouble accessing some areas of Ogoniland and found evidence that unknown parties had tampered with some of the U.N.'s equipment.

Asked about the proposed trust fund, a Shell spokeswoman declined to comment. The company issued a statement saying it "will study the contents carefully and will comment further once we have done so."

Reuben Abati, a spokesman for President Goodluck Jonathan, did not respond to a request for comment.

Nigeria, an OPEC member, is one of the top crude oil suppliers to the U.S.

Source: Forbes.com

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Nigeria Launches Boko Haram Fact-Finding Panel

The Nigerian government has launched a fact-finding mission into the militant Islamist group Boko Haram, which has claimed responsibility for numerous deadly attacks in the northeast and in the capital, Abuja. 

Know thy enemy.  That appears to be the first order of business for the government committee officially inaugurated Tuesday.  Its seven members have two weeks to assess the security challenges in Nigeria's northeastern Borno State.

The committee marks the first real step toward a non-military solution regarding Boko Haram, which launched a brief and violent uprising against the government in July 2009.  The group has since been blamed for a string of bombings and shootings that have targeted churches, public gathering places, and authority figures such as police officers, clergy, and government officials.

The committee was originally tasked with opening negotiations with the militants.  But the secretary to the Nigerian government, Anyim Pius Anyim, said Tuesday that would be getting ahead of themselves. "That should be the second leg of the assignment.  You don't negotiate with who you don't know.  We don't know these people.  They are faceless.  You don't negotiate with the air.  We are providing a forum where whatever information you have, whatever opinion you have, whatever suggestion you have, relay it to this body," Anyim stated. 

Indeed, much is unknown about Boko Haram, including its size, leadership and level of organization.

Boko Haram has rebuffed previous government overtures for dialogue, and building trust with the militants remains a formidable hurdle to negotiations.  Recent attempts by security forces to crack down on them have backfired, and some say have even escalated the violence. 

The committee chairman, ambassador Usman Gaji Galtimari, said the problem is difficult but not "insurmountable" and called on Boko Haram to embrace the dialogue process. "I assure them that all of their genuine grievances will be addressed by the committee and appropriate recommendations made," Galtimari said.

Galtimari urged the group's members to appreciate that "the government is not against them and that society is not at war with them." 

The group's name in the Hausa language means "Western education is sin."  It seeks to undermine state authority and calls for the stricter application of sharia, or Islamic law, in northern Nigeria.

Security analysts say Boko Haram is a symptom of larger issues in the north including poverty and a sense of alienation from the central government in Abuja. 

Nigerian public affairs analyst, Kole Shittima, said the committee is a welcome step, but the government should not stop there. "This is a problem of human security.  It has to do with education, health, employment, so I hope that this discussion is not just about OK, lay down your arms and we are going to maybe exchange your arms for something," Shittima explained.

The committee will try to learn all it can about Boko Haram's leadership, grievances, and goals before recommending a course of action.

Source: VoA

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