Shell has
hijacked UNEP report implementation process, ERA/FoEN Alleges
source:cnn.com
A STERN LOOKING NIGERIAN SOLDIER STANDS GUARDING A FLOW STATION IN THE NIGER DELTA
The
inauguration of a committee for the implementation of the United Nations
Environmental Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoniland is a welcome development but
with the Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke in the driver’s seat,
Shell has obviously hijacked the process, the Environmental Rights
Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has alerted.
Minister of
Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, who inaugurated the
Committee, said the move is part of government’s efforts to seek an enduring
solution to the issue.
The
14-member Committee is to propose a focused engagement and implementation plan
with clearly defined steps and is also mandated to advise the Hydrocarbon
Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP) Advisory Council on the manner in which
assets and funds of the project may be held and utilised.
But ERA/FoEN
in a statement issued in Lagos said that the minister’s involvement in the
process and the inclusion of HYPREP in the exercise clearly makes a mockery of
the demands of the Ogoni and civil society groups as clearly spelt out in the
UNEP report.
ERA/FoEN
Executive Director, Godwin Ojo said: “We strongly affirm that Shell has
hijacked this process through the minister of petroleum. The involvement of the
same minister who has left out vocal groups that have demanded that Shell be
made to take full responsibility of the Ogoni pollution which can best be
categorized as ecocide.
Ojo pointed
out that, “We have said it time and again that HYPREP being an administrative
unit under the petroleum ministry has no role in the clean up of Ogoniland.
Rather, an independent third party should be responsible for the management of
such clean up funds through the Federal Ministry of Environment in conjunction
with the National Oil Spills Detection and Remediation Agency (NOSDRA) which
has the statutory oversight function on
oil spills clean up and remediation.”
“Given the
antecedent of Shell in often declaring spill sites as cleaned up throughout the
Niger Delta the firm has lost complete trust with the people and civil society
groups and thus cannot be trusted to tell the truth”
“We
reiterate that while we applaud the Federal Government for bowing to local and
international pressure to implement recommendations of the UNEP report, the
process that the minister of petroleum has unveiled is totally unacceptable.
Our recommendations have not changed. Shell should have no role in the clean-up
process beyond the polluter pays principle”, Ojo insisted.
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