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- MOSOP hails Buhari on implementation of UNEP report on Ogoniland
Ernest Chinwo in Port Harcourt with agency report

Amnesty International (AI) yesterday appealed to Shell to ensure that it complies with the federal government’s new commitment to tackle oil pollution in the Niger Delta by dramatically improving on how it cleans up oil spills in the Niger Delta.
Amnesty International (AI) yesterday appealed to Shell to ensure that it complies with the federal government’s new commitment to tackle oil pollution in the Niger Delta by dramatically improving on how it cleans up oil spills in the Niger Delta.
President Buhari’s had on Wednesday announced a trust fund to pay for the clean-up of the Ogoniland region.
But AI through its Researcher on Business and Human Rights, Mark
Dummett, who has just returned from the Niger Delta, said President
Buhari’s initiative would fail, and that the Ogoni people would continue
to suffer, as long as Shell fails to make significant changes to the
way it approaches oil spill clean-up.
“It is scandalous that Shell, which now wants the world to trust it to
drill in the Arctic, has failed to properly implement the UN’s expert
advice on oil spill response after so long.
“President Buhari’s initiative will fail, and the Ogoni people will
continue to suffer, as long as Shell fails to make significant changes
to the way it approaches oil spill clean-up,” it said.
The establishment of the trust fund was a key recommendation of the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which published a study on
oil pollution in Ogoniland four years ago.
The UNEP study also called for Shell’s clean-up methods to be urgently
overhauled, including reviewing its methodology and addressing serious
delays in responding to spills.
But researchers from Amnesty International investigating spill sites in
the region have this month found oil on the soil and in nearby water
bodies, in areas where Shell contractors are reported to have recently
carried out remediation.
The fund will be overseen by representatives of the Ogoni people, the United Nations, the oil companies operating in Nigeria and the government itself.
The fund will be overseen by representatives of the Ogoni people, the United Nations, the oil companies operating in Nigeria and the government itself.
According to the government, “stakeholders” will pay an initial $10
million into the fund, but it is not clear who these stakeholders will
be.
$10 million is far below the $1 billion that the UNEP said should be
paid into the fund to cover the first five years of a clean-up job which
could take up to 30 years.
The UNEP study recommended that the contributions should be made by both the oil industry and the government.
“Ogoniland has been devastated by years of oil spills and Shell’s
clean-up operations have been utterly ineffective,” said Mark Dummett.
“In 2011 UNEP highlighted numerous serious problems with the way Shell
cleans up oil sites. But we have visited multiple sites and found oil
pollution lying all around. From what we are seeing, little has changed
since then.”
Meanwhiel, the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP)
yesterday commended the President Muhammadu Buhari-led federal
government for approving the setting up of governing structures to
facilitate the implementation of recommendations of the UNEP report on
Ogoniland.
However, MOSOP in a statement issued in Port Harcourt by the
Media/Public Affairs Adviser to its President, Bari-ara Kpalap, noted
that the approval came at a time when there had been “growing scepticism
driven by experiences of untoward politicisation of implementation of
the report by the immediate past administration.”
He said: “The approval demonstrates a comforting shift from rhetoric to
matching words with action,” adding that it has “rebuilt and
strengthens the confidence of our people in the government.”
He also said: “In reciprocation of the government’s response to our
outcries, MOSOP pledges to cooperate with the administration and other
stakeholders to ensure a successful implementation of recommendations of
the report.
“While we applaud the approach, we would appeal to the national
government not to delay the constitution of the approved governance
structures to enable urgent commencement of the Ogoni environmental
remediation and restoration exercise.
“We would thus implore Mr. President, to, as a matter of urgency, call
for nominations from the defined stakeholders to enhance composition of
the Governing Council and the Board of Trustees of the intervention
agency.”
He however warned, “Since Ogoni experiences high rainfall, which
influences expansion of the pollution footprints and compounds our
environmental nightmare attributable to the non-implementation of the
report, further delay, as a matter of fact, would inflict on the report
dire implications, which would require another study to validate earlier
findings.
“The Ogoni people would therefore be greatly enlivened and satisfied at
an urgent take-off of the clean-up and restoration exercise.”
He called on the people of Ogoniland to ensure thay did not do anything
to jeopardise the efforts of the federal government to implement the
UNEP report.
“We will urge our people to realise that the commendable step taken by
the federal government imposes on us all a high sense of organisation
and unity of purpose. And it is therefore important that we avoid, even
if tempted, tendencies capable of jeopardising the process and making us
a laughing stock,” the statement said.
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