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Address Environmental Degradation In Ijaw Land, INC Urges

By Deborah Coker

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environmental degradation in Ijaw land

Abuja, Aug. 17, 2024 (NAN) President of the ljaw National Congress, (INC), Prof Benjamin Okaba, has called for urgent measures from government, global community and regulatory agencies to  address environmental degradation in Ijaw land.

Okaba said this in his remarks at a strategic meeting with Exco of the Europe Chapter in London.

In the speech obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Abuja, Okaba also drew the attention to the dilapidated oil facilities in Ijaw land and the Niger Delta besides the issue of environmental degradation.

The INC president who catalogued the human and environmental woes that have plagued the ljaw people, since the discovery of oil in the region, noted that oil to the ljaws, was now a curse and not a blessing.

He noted that as part of the internationalisation of the INC’s advocacy for environmental justice and True Federalism deliberate measures should and must be taken by ljaws all over the world to condemn the increasing spate and scope of underdevelopment.

“Human and environmental degradations and suffered by the ljaw people despite being among the four largest and major oil and gas producing ethnic groups in Nigeria must also be condemned,” he said.

The INC president also referenced the sordid state of ljaw land as copiously captured in a commissioned document as among the issues pertaining to environmental degradation in the region.

According to him the document is titled Environmental Genocide: Counting the Humanitarian and Environmental Cost of Oil and Gas Production in Bayelsa”.

He appealed for speedy intervention and rescue by well meaning international human right institutions in the world before the situation gets out of hand.

“As we speak the ljaw people are at high risk of instalmental deaths, arising from the unmitigated and nefarious oil exploratory activities in the land.

“I therefore appeal to international organisations to help the ljaw people from the slow deaths they are daily subjected to.

“This situation may be far more than the deaths in conventional wars, known to humanity,” he said.

The president also described the present 13 per cent and three per cent Federal allocation to oil producing States and the Host Communities as meagre and grossly inadequate in addressing the colossal damages inflicted on the ljaw people. (NAN)

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