17th December, 2014
PRESS RELEASE:
TOMPOLO’S
ALLEGED ACQUISITION OF WARSHIPS: NIGERIAN NAVY, NIMASA SHOULD SPEAK OUT
The former leader of the
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Government Ekpemupolo
(aka Tompolo) was recently alleged to have acquired four warships. The
acquisition has also raised fears among ethnicities in the Niger Delta area.
The Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC) regards this information as disturbing. Coming at the peak of electioneering
excitement, a rumour like the acquisition of deadly weapons by a militant
leader must be taken seriously by security conscious Nigerians.
The fear about such acquisition
is heightened by earlier threats coming from Niger Delta militants to the
effect that the latter would attack the rest of the country if President
Jonathan fails to clinch a second term ticket. There must be apprehension if a
witch cried yesterday and a child dies today.
It is however reassuring that
Tompolo, through his spokesman, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, has denied the
allegation. Although the Niger Delta warlord debunked the allegation of
acquisition of warships, he admitted that he actually bought boats equipped
with modern surveillance devices to track oil thieves.
He also assured members of
the public that the ships had been in the care of the Nigerian Maritime
Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) for the past two years. According to
Tompolo, NIMASA involved the Nigerian Navy in the usage and operations of the surveillance
boats.
The ball is therefore in the
courts of NIMASA and the Nigerian Navy. What does NIMASA know about the boats? Is
it true that they were bought with NIMASA’s assistance as claimed by Tompolo? Can
the NAVY also confirm that the boats are not equipped with war arsenals? The
Nigerian public needs to know.
The responses of both
NIMASA and the Nigerian Navy will go a long way to douse tension throughout the
country. Nigerians have been on edge since the news broke in the media. It is capable of fueling an arms race among different ethnicities, not
only in the Niger Delta but nationwide. This is a dangerous dimension particularly if the
weapons fall into wrong hands. It may worsen the security challenge facing the
country.
MURIC reminds people of
the Niger Delta of the moral support they enjoyed from civil society in
particular, the press and the Nigerian public in general during its armed
struggle. We assure MEND and other groups in the region of our consistency in
condemning the excesses of the oil companies, the nonchalance of past regimes and
the criminal deprivation of the region of economic, health and education
infrastructure.
However, we advise groups
from the region to eschew threats and violence and to always resort to legal
and constitutional means in finding lasting solution to problems facing the
Niger Delta. This is the only way groups from the region
can continue to enjoy public sympathy.
Professor Ishaq Akintola,
Director,
Muslim Rights Concern
(MURIC)
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