UNEP REPORT: Is Justice Imminent?

Last week, I complained about justice being delayed. I was referring to the fact that the Federal Government and Ministry of Petroleum had not even started to implement a 3 year-old United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) report.

The report focused on the terrible damage that Ogoniland – my home terrain – had suffered because of badly managed oil exploration and production activities; and it strongly recommended various crucial remedial measures.

The Federal Government had, in response to this UNEP report, established the Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project, HYPREP, a body that was domiciled in the Ministry of Petroleum and headed by Mrs Joi Okunnu, an Ogoni lawyer.

My beef was that HYPREP had not achieved anything beyond making statements containing very annoying mere platitudes and feeble excuses about its inertia; and I expressed disappointment in President Goodluck Jonathan, the Minister of Petroleum Resources (Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke) and Mrs Okunnu… … on the grounds that all three of them are fellow Niger Deltans who a) have first-hand knowledge of the devastation that pollution has wreaked on our region and its inhabitants and b) ought to be taking this problem much more seriously.

Just before my complaint was published last Friday, Mrs Alison-Madueke made it obvious, in a public forum, that she no longer wished to work with Mrs Okunnu.

The Minister also issued a press release on September 16, via Mr Ohi Alegbe, the Group General Manager Public Affairs of her key parastatal, NNPC, in which she admitted that the implementation process had started late, but explained that this delay was caused by a need to enthrone Due Process.

The following comments and promises were made in the press release:

-The Federal Government is now ready to fully execute the clean-up of Ogoniland, as recommended in UNEP’s assessment report.

-The Government in its renewed commitment to the environmental restoration effort, will review extant frameworks set up to undertake the process. This structural review is necessary for government to guarantee an appropriate and accountable restoration programme.

-Parts of the structural adjustments in the implementation efforts will include the setting up of an independent body, as recommended in the report, to deploy and disburse funds meant for the restoration exercise.

-The UNEP report recommended that the Government and oil companies contribute $1 billion to the clean-up exercise. This fund will be managed by a new independent authority with a fixed initial lifespan of 10 years.

-It has become clear that Ogoni communities and relevant stakeholders have not been properly consulted or incorporated into the implementation processes of the UNEP report. Accordingly, Government has been deliberately cautious by carefully reviewing the HYPREP structure to determine the best way to rejuvenate the programme to fully restore Ogoniland as it is envisioned in the report.

-The Government will quickly move forward with these plans “in a very aggressive manner”… and will create a major steering committee… and face the restoration process in a way that will achieve visible results and make it clear that the authorities are fully behind the Ogoni clean-up.

-Impacted communities, traditional rulers and the President of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People, MOSOP, have said that they will cooperate for as long as Government exhibits convincing sincerity and matches its words with actions and transparency.  Continue reading…

Post Author: OgoniNews

HURAC is a club instituted by the Movement For the Survival of the Ogoni People, which is open to all secondary schools within and outside Ogoni and also to all intending members. It`s currently operating in Riv-Poly secondary school, its division HQTRS, and also in CSS Bori, ACGS Bori, BMGS Bori and some Portharcourt schools. It has Kate, Wisdom Deebeke as its pioneer Senior Chief Co-ordinator. It was inaugurated in Riv-Poly by the INTELLECTUAL ELITE BATCH, with Tuaka Jeremiah as the appointed Chairman as at then. It aims at educating members and the public on their fundamental human rights, human rights advocacy, human rights abuses and campaign, etc. To learn more about HURAC, please go to http://huraclub.org/.

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