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The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Sweetguy25: 6:24pm On Nov 23, 2015
By Patrick Dele Cole

Of late, two Ijaws citizens have come under the light of the agents charged with corruption: Mrs. Diezani Allison-Maduekwe, and Chief D. S. P Alamieyesiegha. One was arrested in London plushest address at No.1 Park Lane; another one was being sought out by the British police to answer charges of money laundering.

This piece in no way condones alleged corrupt practices and no one should read it as such. For the benefit of doubt, Mrs. Deziani Allison-Madueke was charged with corruption; the NNPC over which she presided was the Sodom and Gomorrah of corruption and the stories about how allegedly corrupt NNPC was, is a legion.

As for Governor DSP Alamieyesiegha, he ran away from Nigeria to undergo a tummy tuck operation in Germany. When the warrant for his arrest was issued in Dubai, he ran to London where he was thoroughly watched by the secret services of Britain. He left London, according to some sources, with the active connivance of the British authorities, for Cote de Ivorie en route to Nigeria. On arrival to Nigeria, he was promptly arrested by EFCC. But he spent several months in the hospital in Lagos and Abuja before he was released.

A couple of years later, he was pardoned by President Goodluck Jonathan. About a fourth night ago he was said to be wanted by the British authorities for money laundering. He has not been enjoying good health, although the incessant and unrelenting pursuit by the British and other authorities could not have improved his health. He died soon after.

Let's go back to the antecedent of Alamieyesiegha's impeachment. A good precedent in law is that, although an enthusiastic officer may pursue a case with all due diligence, he may not do so while breaking the law. Alamieyesiegha's impeachment was a travesty of the Nigerian constitution. He may have been a thief but the law demands proof in a proper court by the prosecution that the culprit is indeed guilty. The impeachment provision in our constitution is antithetical to that very constitution which guarantees to every individual the right of justice. Mr. DSP Alamieyesiegha was dragooned into impeachment by overzealous EFCC members, on the order of higher authorities.

There are 24 members of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly. The EFCC simply picked up all of them and asked them to account for the one billion Naira constituency project they signed for, they were all locked up at 15 Awolowo road and asked to sign a declaration condemning the government or explain a one billion naira constituency project each received in their states.

This declaration formed the basis of the impeachment, which lasted eight hours from when they returned, to Yenagoa in Bayelsa. The House formed a committee to impeach, asked the Chief Judge to draw up charges and set up an impeachment tribunal which reported to the Chief Judge who rubber stamped this Kangaroo court.

Our constitution although is a legal document, is written in simple English which could be understood even by the near illiterate. Can impeachment proceed if it does ask for a committee to draw up the charges, it does ask for the intervention of the chief judge but it further asks, as is normal in other cases, for the accused to be informed of the charges against him on both occasions and more importantly that the accused must be given a right of reply within 21days after the charges preferred against him have been published.

None of this was done in Bayelsa. Mr. Goodluck was the Deputy Governor and he saw all these illegalities yet he accepted them so that he may be Governor. When he became President he attempted to right a palpable wrong. He granted Governor Alamieyesiegha a pardon. The impeachment of Alamieyesiegha took all of seven hours from when the assembly men came back to Bayelsa. Does this mean that the Governor was not corrupt? Not at all.

But it does mean that our Law enforcement agencies cannot in the pursuit of a particular case commit a plethora of offences and get away with them. Most Nigerians have a simplistic view of matters such as this: but the man was corrupt etc. he should be in jail. Should this be the case then for all the Governors, Presidents, Vice Presidents we have ever had; should they on then say so of Nigerians be in jail.

The case against Alamieyesiegha wasn't proved and can never be proved since he is now dead. Many people would be puzzled as to my stand in this issue clearly; they would say Alamieyesiegha was guilty of corruption. Why waste government's time and money to prove the clear evidence? You do it because it's the basis of Democracy - a man is free, innocent until proven guilty. Alamieyesiegha was one of 36 thriving governors, one of thousands thieving politicians; his death in no way reduces the culpability of the others.


Alamieyesiegha was hounded to death because he was a minority. Diezani's case is more difficult to defend because so far, it is going according to Law. Many Ijaws have complained about her implacable hatred of her fellow ethnic comperes; that her shadow fell far away from the Ijaws: her favour went to many non-Ijaws all of whom are lining up to put bigger nails on her coffin. I am on record of saying that the job was too big for her, just as Jonathan's job, turned out to be big for him. She inherited a broken NNPC, totally unfit for purpose.

She had no one to advise her on what to do; those who advised her became instant enemies. She worked in a kleptocracy and there was no cause for her to distinguish herself in that group except maybe excel in their peculiar calling. Her appointment confirms a simple fact - the International Oil Companies (IOC) are inherently in an antagonist relationship with NNPC. This is not that bad but one cannot keep going to those one regulates to pick the head of NNPC. Her knowledge of the business was skimpy but does she deserve her present treatment?

To answer such question, we have to delve into history. Oil which though no more than 10% of GDP produces over 90% of funds for the Federal Government which then divides the proceeds among the 36 states. The governors of the nine oil producing states are the super stars of Committee of Governors (COGs).


I HAVE been accused of being like Mark Anthony making a speech after Caesar’s assassination : “I come to bury Caesar, and not to praise him.” As far as corruption is concerned, Mr. President must use the same broom to sweep it out in both the PDP and the APC. We wait with baited breadth.

The Ijaws are bigger than the Urhobos, the Tivs, the Idomas, the Ibibios yet they lack the power of these groups. The oil that feeds the Federal Government is mainly from Ijaw land and waters. Has anyone thought of how much it would cost to clean these lands and waters?

The reality is that when the oil dries up, the IOCs will pick up and leave. This has been the lot of small powerless people the world over – look at what has happened to Southern Louisiana where the blacks and poor whites live.

Less than 30 years ago, there was one petrol station in Yenagoa in the whole of Bayelsa. There was none anywhere else: in Buguma, Tombia, Bakana, Abonnema, Okrika, even Bonny. None in Brass, Nembe, Oporokuma, etc. In all these places till to-day Kerosene, which is their main fuel for cooking, costs more than anywhere else in Nigeria? Children still go to school in canoes and buildings are still on sticks jutting out of the water. There is nowhere in Ijaw land with potable water to drink. We drink from wells. The toilets are still at the water side, next to where they bathe. This degree of poverty is no excuse for the excesses of our ministers and governors who obviously have not learnt the art of hiding their wealth. What wealth is there to hide when 80 per cent of the buildings are made of mangrove trees. There is no need to go to Brazil to see how the natives live – just a few miles out of Port Harcourt or Yenagoa or Bomadi or Patani and you are in Ijaw country. The water has the inevitable shine of oil spillages.

The people stand by the waterside and watch their land being drained of its wealth as the service boats and badges speed along to destinations unknown. The Ijaws are a modern misfit; cannot move speedily because the boats cost too much. Cannot keep nurses and doctors in the cottage hospitals built because these people have no after work recreation; there is no recreation club in any Ijaw town that I know, so no football, tennis, billiards, etc. The people are just emerging from ravages that insect parasites visit on their hairs, their legs and feet – lice, jiggers, etc. The men have to go further afield for fishing; the women sell next to nothing. Yet their culture is rich and calls for wealth. The Chiefs are so poor that they are no better than beggars and their Local Government Chairmen know this and treat them with the ignominy beggars deserve. Chiefs go to parties with plastic bags to carry away food and drinks. The elegant chiefs’ dresses many see when these chiefs go to Abuja, Port Harcourt, Asaba, Yenogoa – are a chimera – a phantom of an age long gone to which they pretend to succeed. No serious Ijaw man stays in his village – to do what?

He may have a decent house in Port Harcourt, Yenagoa, Asaba, Warri and visits home like a holiday maker at the weekends to see what he can get.

If an Ijaw man is president or governor, he will try to sleep with five or six women every two or three hours of the day. He will drink, usually with his friends, with complete abandon. It is not that he does not realise the weight of his office. He does. But it does not matter to his psyche. We drink with one glass out of a basin of home-made spirit. If it is a woman and she has money, she will spend it like water. She will order containers from China that will seat for six years without opening it. If she sees new things, she will order more; she has no recollection what she has ordered or how much. She will beg her husband to kingdom come for more money for more orders. If she is rich enough she will buy houses in almost all cities and may never enter one of them. She will have no idea where her documents are.

All the above is obviously a caricature. Even so, given the resources he so abundantly has, if Nigeria’s law on minerals were different, the Ijaws would react differently.

In conclusion, the Ijaws have to stop being small minded and come together. The Federal Government destroyed an Ijaw town which today remains destroyed. If we apply the same rule, how much of the North East, Niger, Abuja, etc would be destroyed, flattened, because of Boko Haram? The Ijaws were being punished for failure to stop an insurgency. The Ijaws are consumed by small minded jealousies: Okrika vs Ogoloma vs Bakana; inter chieftaincy fights in Bonny and Finima; Abonnema vs Buguma, Nembe vs Brass and so forth. These divisions sap Ijaw power and make them open to exploitation. Their land is polluted, their rivers are non-habitable, their people remain the poorest; the pollution in Ijaw land cannot be ended given decades of pollution by oil and gas; their livelihood is precarious. And now to the rest of Nigeria, the Ijaws are saying that no one has the right to ask an Ijaw man “what have you done with the money we gave to you.” When last I checked, you cannot give me what is mine.

Dr. (Ambassador) Cole, OFR, writes from Lagos.
http://allafrica.com/stories/201511162287.html

1 Like 1 Share

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Sweetguy25: 6:36pm On Nov 23, 2015
cc: dearpreye
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Nobody: 6:36pm On Nov 23, 2015
Okay
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by kayusely: 6:57pm On Nov 23, 2015
Why are you making this submission now almost a decade after the incident.
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by basilo101: 7:11pm On Nov 23, 2015
there are kanuri, gwari, nupe etc in the north. but they all identify as North. when u allowed urself to be a tool for the divide and conquer strategy of the hausa/fulani and their yoruba servants u tot u were hurting the igbos

3 Likes

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by warripekin(m): 7:46pm On Nov 23, 2015
The problem of the Ijaw nation is the problem of the Niger Delta as a whole. We do not have unity of purpose and we often fight the wrong battles. We leave and act as if oyel no go finish one day. Young persons here are confused without direction. Most of our leaders are selfish and fight only for their pockets. I believe the time for the emancipation of the Niger delta has long come but we need men and women who will put self interest aside and fight for the common good.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by yang(m): 8:11pm On Nov 23, 2015
Ambassador cole writes from Lagos
Am I the only one who saw this?

Oga when you are serious, you start writing from Brass

1 Like

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by EdCure: 8:44pm On Nov 23, 2015
kayusely:
Why are you making this submission now almost a decade after the incident.
What incident exactly?

Try to read the entire essay. It is a painstaking appraisal of the militating challenges of the ijaws (and by extension, resource-rich southern ethnic minorities) as regards the predatory practices of the dominant, power-hungry Northern predators in an unjust, structurally unbalanced, parasitic Nigeria.

1 Like

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by EdCure: 8:49pm On Nov 23, 2015
yang:

Am I the only one who saw this?

Oga when you are serious, you start writing from Brass

No serious ijaw man stays in Ijaw land.
...So he wrote.

1 Like

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by GINJALAND: 8:56pm On Nov 23, 2015
yang:

Am I the only one who saw this?

Oga when you are serious, you start writing from Brass


cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy cheesy
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Nobody: 11:14pm On Nov 23, 2015
Nigeria will never clean those lands and continental shelf. Instead of those Seven Sisters to clean them, they will throw all their toys out of their prams. They fought it out with the USA, during the oil spillage saga.
A report quoted it will take atleast $500m to start the cleaning... But will take $1bn.
Who is going to put that down for an African village, with this dwindling oil price and the G7 seriously researching for alternative to Oil in order to save the planet? Amnesty has already raised fears that the land may never be restored.
The Ijaw people can only hope..
I think they should also be worried about the effects of global warning; many of their villages and land will be submerged in water in few years time.
Good luck to them, cos they will need it.

1 Like

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by ArodeTsolaye: 12:13am On Nov 24, 2015
They know what to do, but some irreedeemable ones among them are still listening to awusa-fulani and yoruba serpent voices because they want to be willinf tools to spite the Igbo and others in the Biafran commonwealth. Unfortunately time is running out on them to make up their minds and Biafrans are watching keenly.
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Pavore9: 12:25am On Nov 24, 2015
yang:

Am I the only one who saw this?

Oga when you are serious, you start writing from Brass

Did you not read where he wrote 'No serious ijaw man stays in Ijaw land'.
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Sweetguy25: 6:25pm On Nov 26, 2015
Though I'm Igbo, I was born in old PH (Borikiri and environs) and grew with Ijaws. Anytime I think about Nigeria, the Ijaws always come to my mind. The Ijaw nation is not supposed to be where the Nigerian neocolonialists have discarded them. They deserve more!
If there's any justice in this country, the Ijaws would be the most prosperous tribe in Nigeria. They lose over 50 billion dollars every single year to the Nigerian state, without their consent and due to their ignorance. And Nigerians don't even care about them or their future. Its very painful. No tribe/ethnic nation loses more from being Nigerians than the Ijaws. They have also lost (almost) their natural habitat! Can you believe that?
I know they made and make mistakes but that should not mean they should be subjected to the level of neglect which they're currently exposed to.

This is why I cringe when I see comment from barcanista on biafra. They're heart wrenching! I don't believe barcanista have the interest of his people at heart.
The Ijaws should be begging Igbos for Biafra and not the other way round. The Ijaws are losing so much just by being Nigerians, lose of human capital, environmental degradation, loss of wealth etc. Its unbearable!

Ijaws should wake up!! Act like the Ogonis for once. Stop all oil exploration and production activities in your lands and watch Nigeria freeze! The Ogonis are not dead yet!

Ijaws should wake up!

3 Likes

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by mikron(m): 6:29pm On Nov 26, 2015
cheesy

Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by Duru1(m): 6:46pm On Nov 26, 2015
Sweetguy25:


By Patrick Dele Cole

Of late, two Ijaws citizens have come under the light of the agents charged with corruption: Mrs. Diezani Allison-Maduekwe, and Chief D. S. P Alamieyesiegha. One was arrested in London plushest address at No.1 Park Lane; another one was being sought out by the British police to answer charges of money laundering.

This piece in no way condones alleged corrupt practices and no one should read it as such. For the benefit of doubt, Mrs. Deziani Allison-Madueke was charged with corruption; the NNPC over which she presided was the Sodom and Gomorrah of corruption and the stories about how allegedly corrupt NNPC was, is a legion.

As for Governor DSP Alamieyesiegha, he ran away from Nigeria to undergo a tummy tuck operation in Germany. When the warrant for his arrest was issued in Dubai, he ran to London where he was thoroughly watched by the secret services of Britain. He left London, according to some sources, with the active connivance of the British authorities, for Cote de Ivorie en route to Nigeria. On arrival to Nigeria, he was promptly arrested by EFCC. But he spent several months in the hospital in Lagos and Abuja before he was released.

A couple of years later, he was pardoned by President Goodluck Jonathan. About a fourth night ago he was said to be wanted by the British authorities for money laundering. He has not been enjoying good health, although the incessant and unrelenting pursuit by the British and other authorities could not have improved his health. He died soon after.

Let's go back to the antecedent of Alamieyesiegha's impeachment. A good precedent in law is that, although an enthusiastic officer may pursue a case with all due diligence, he may not do so while breaking the law. Alamieyesiegha's impeachment was a travesty of the Nigerian constitution. He may have been a thief but the law demands proof in a proper court by the prosecution that the culprit is indeed guilty. The impeachment provision in our constitution is antithetical to that very constitution which guarantees to every individual the right of justice. Mr. DSP Alamieyesiegha was dragooned into impeachment by overzealous EFCC members, on the order of higher authorities.

There are 24 members of the Bayelsa State House of Assembly. The EFCC simply picked up all of them and asked them to account for the one billion Naira constituency project they signed for, they were all locked up at 15 Awolowo road and asked to sign a declaration condemning the government or explain a one billion naira constituency project each received in their states.

This declaration formed the basis of the impeachment, which lasted eight hours from when they returned, to Yenagoa in Bayelsa. The House formed a committee to impeach, asked the Chief Judge to draw up charges and set up an impeachment tribunal which reported to the Chief Judge who rubber stamped this Kangaroo court.

Our constitution although is a legal document, is written in simple English which could be understood even by the near illiterate. Can impeachment proceed if it does ask for a committee to draw up the charges, it does ask for the intervention of the chief judge but it further asks, as is normal in other cases, for the accused to be informed of the charges against him on both occasions and more importantly that the accused must be given a right of reply within 21days after the charges preferred against him have been published.

None of this was done in Bayelsa. Mr. Goodluck was the Deputy Governor and he saw all these illegalities yet he accepted them so that he may be Governor. When he became President he attempted to right a palpable wrong. He granted Governor Alamieyesiegha a pardon. The impeachment of Alamieyesiegha took all of seven hours from when the assembly men came back to Bayelsa. Does this mean that the Governor was not corrupt? Not at all.

But it does mean that our Law enforcement agencies cannot in the pursuit of a particular case commit a plethora of offences and get away with them. Most Nigerians have a simplistic view of matters such as this: but the man was corrupt etc. he should be in jail. Should this be the case then for all the Governors, Presidents, Vice Presidents we have ever had; should they on then say so of Nigerians be in jail.

The case against Alamieyesiegha wasn't proved and can never be proved since he is now dead. Many people would be puzzled as to my stand in this issue clearly; they would say Alamieyesiegha was guilty of corruption. Why waste government's time and money to prove the clear evidence? You do it because it's the basis of Democracy - a man is free, innocent until proven guilty. Alamieyesiegha was one of 36 thriving governors, one of thousands thieving politicians; his death in no way reduces the culpability of the others.


Alamieyesiegha was hounded to death because he was a minority. Diezani's case is more difficult to defend because so far, it is going according to Law. Many Ijaws have complained about her implacable hatred of her fellow ethnic comperes; that her shadow fell far away from the Ijaws: her favour went to many non-Ijaws all of whom are lining up to put bigger nails on her coffin. I am on record of saying that the job was too big for her, just as Jonathan's job, turned out to be big for him. She inherited a broken NNPC, totally unfit for purpose.

She had no one to advise her on what to do; those who advised her became instant enemies. She worked in a kleptocracy and there was no cause for her to distinguish herself in that group except maybe excel in their peculiar calling. Her appointment confirms a simple fact - the International Oil Companies (IOC) are inherently in an antagonist relationship with NNPC. This is not that bad but one cannot keep going to those one regulates to pick the head of NNPC. Her knowledge of the business was skimpy but does she deserve her present treatment?

To answer such question, we have to delve into history. Oil which though no more than 10% of GDP produces over 90% of funds for the Federal Government which then divides the proceeds among the 36 states. The governors of the nine oil producing states are the super stars of Committee of Governors (COGs).


I HAVE been accused of being like Mark Anthony making a speech after Caesar’s assassination : “I come to bury Caesar, and not to praise him.” As far as corruption is concerned, Mr. President must use the same broom to sweep it out in both the PDP and the APC. We wait with baited breadth.

The Ijaws are bigger than the Urhobos, the Tivs, the Idomas, the Ibibios yet they lack the power of these groups. The oil that feeds the Federal Government is mainly from Ijaw land and waters. Has anyone thought of how much it would cost to clean these lands and waters?

The reality is that when the oil dries up, the IOCs will pick up and leave. This has been the lot of small powerless people the world over – look at what has happened to Southern Louisiana where the blacks and poor whites live.

Less than 30 years ago, there was one petrol station in Yenagoa in the whole of Bayelsa. There was none anywhere else: in Buguma, Tombia, Bakana, Abonnema, Okrika, even Bonny. None in Brass, Nembe, Oporokuma, etc. In all these places till to-day Kerosene, which is their main fuel for cooking, costs more than anywhere else in Nigeria? Children still go to school in canoes and buildings are still on sticks jutting out of the water. There is nowhere in Ijaw land with potable water to drink. We drink from wells. The toilets are still at the water side, next to where they bathe. This degree of poverty is no excuse for the excesses of our ministers and governors who obviously have not learnt the art of hiding their wealth. What wealth is there to hide when 80 per cent of the buildings are made of mangrove trees. There is no need to go to Brazil to see how the natives live – just a few miles out of Port Harcourt or Yenagoa or Bomadi or Patani and you are in Ijaw country. The water has the inevitable shine of oil spillages.

The people stand by the waterside and watch their land being drained of its wealth as the service boats and badges speed along to destinations unknown. The Ijaws are a modern misfit; cannot move speedily because the boats cost too much. Cannot keep nurses and doctors in the cottage hospitals built because these people have no after work recreation; there is no recreation club in any Ijaw town that I know, so no football, tennis, billiards, etc. The people are just emerging from ravages that insect parasites visit on their hairs, their legs and feet – lice, jiggers, etc. The men have to go further afield for fishing; the women sell next to nothing. Yet their culture is rich and calls for wealth. The Chiefs are so poor that they are no better than beggars and their Local Government Chairmen know this and treat them with the ignominy beggars deserve. Chiefs go to parties with plastic bags to carry away food and drinks. The elegant chiefs’ dresses many see when these chiefs go to Abuja, Port Harcourt, Asaba, Yenogoa – are a chimera – a phantom of an age long gone to which they pretend to succeed. No serious Ijaw man stays in his village – to do what?

He may have a decent house in Port Harcourt, Yenagoa, Asaba, Warri and visits home like a holiday maker at the weekends to see what he can get.

If an Ijaw man is president or governor, he will try to sleep with five or six women every two or three hours of the day. He will drink, usually with his friends, with complete abandon. It is not that he does not realise the weight of his office. He does. But it does not matter to his psyche. We drink with one glass out of a basin of home-made spirit. If it is a woman and she has money, she will spend it like water. She will order containers from China that will seat for six years without opening it. If she sees new things, she will order more; she has no recollection what she has ordered or how much. She will beg her husband to kingdom come for more money for more orders. If she is rich enough she will buy houses in almost all cities and may never enter one of them. She will have no idea where her documents are.

All the above is obviously a caricature. Even so, given the resources he so abundantly has, if Nigeria’s law on minerals were different, the Ijaws would react differently.

In conclusion, the Ijaws have to stop being small minded and come together. The Federal Government destroyed an Ijaw town which today remains destroyed. If we apply the same rule, how much of the North East, Niger, Abuja, etc would be destroyed, flattened, because of Boko Haram? The Ijaws were being punished for failure to stop an insurgency. The Ijaws are consumed by small minded jealousies: Okrika vs Ogoloma vs Bakana; inter chieftaincy fights in Bonny and Finima; Abonnema vs Buguma, Nembe vs Brass and so forth. These divisions sap Ijaw power and make them open to exploitation. Their land is polluted, their rivers are non-habitable, their people remain the poorest; the pollution in Ijaw land cannot be ended given decades of pollution by oil and gas; their livelihood is precarious. And now to the rest of Nigeria, the Ijaws are saying that no one has the right to ask an Ijaw man “what have you done with the money we gave to you.” When last I checked, you cannot give me what is mine.

Dr. (Ambassador) Cole, OFR, writes from Lagos.

http://allafrica.com/stories/201511162287.html


Ambassadoe Cole, I am afraid to say that Ijo had the opportunity for good life in paradise but chose to waste it. It is said that opportunity comes but once. It pained to me to reach Yenegoa in the 70s only to found that canoe was the means of house to house call. Yet I look at Lagos and lately Abuja, I swear the crude oil wells came from those environs. History owes posterity to every one of us.
Re: The Ijaws - A Nation In Distress by meezynetwork(m): 7:26pm On Nov 26, 2015
The disunity among them will never allow them to be strong. Though the ijaws are wicked to themselves and to others with the short foresight. I remember how they treated others in the old rivers state. Even to the Igbos by seizing most of their properties. So tell me how such people can progress? If the Yorubas would return properties to the real owners, how come the Ijaws couldn't?

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