This past week, several reports
confirmed the Escravos – Warri – Abuja – Lagos pipelines, the Abiteye
flow station and Sagara to Chevron pipelines in Delta State were bombed. The attacks started on Thursday and are still taking place.
Vanguard reports that it can cause another inter-ethnic war, and the military has been deployed to fish out vandals from villages.
Attacks
on oil installations in Delta State entered the third day, yesterday,
as militants blew-up major crude oil and gas pipelines to the Chevron
Nigeria Limited, CNL, Tank Farm in Warri South West Local Government
Area of the state.
Blown up on Friday
night was the main crude line from Makaraba through Otunana and Abiteye
to Escravos while Olero to Escravos gas line was attacked in the early
hours of yesterday.
Earlier on
Thursday, the Escravos – Warri – Abuja – Lagos pipelines came under
attack. The Itsekiri raised the alarm, yesterday, that the attacks could
metamorphose into another Ijaw-Itsekiri war.
These acts of sabotage are coming at a time when global crude oil price continues its downward move.The military, yesterday, deployed army and naval personnel in the creeks of Delta State to contain the militants.
Now Governor Ifeanyi Okowa
of Delta State has condemned the attacks in a statement released to the
press today. The governor is disappointed as only last week, his
administration held a stakeholders summit against vandalism. Vanguard reports,
“These
attacks should be condemned by all well meaning Nigerians, particularly
compatriots from Niger Delta. This is an attack on our soul. The state
is bleeding again and its implication for the economy and image of Delta
state grave”, he said.
The governor
noted that only last week, his administration hosted a stakeholders’
summit on the effects of the vandalism of oil and gas facilities in the
state; where the various arms of the security agencies, the oil and gas
operators and the host communities converged to brainstorm on measures
to stem the activities of vandals. He noted these attacks, coming just
few days after the summit, was not a good way of reciprocating the good
intentions of his government and the enormous resources that are being
invested in turning around the fortunes of the state.
He
called on community leaders and youth groups to resist any temptation
to be drawn into these nefarious activities as this might jeopardize the
on-going intervention of federal government, in the lives of the
youths, through the Amnesty Office.
“Do
not be part of this crime and refuse to listen to any leader or
politician who would want to pitch one ethnic nationality against the
other as a result of these incidents. The destruction of oil facilities
is purely criminal and we reject attempts to label it otherwise,” the
Governor observed.
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