Nigeria wants Shell to take responsibility for cleaning up of Ogoniland
More reactions have continued to trail alleged attempts by the Federal Government to shield Shell Petroleum
Development Company (SPDC) from taking responsibility for reckless and massive oil pollution in Ogoniland.
Latest in the opposition is leading environmental watchdog, the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth
Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) who made it clear that the deal is "totally unacceptable and makes a nonsense of efforts at
bringing about lasting and true peace in the Niger Delta". ERA/FoEN, reacting to reports that government has engaged
the services of the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) to clean Ogoniland as part of efforts to restore
the Niger Delta environment, said the decision is "a mockery" of international best practice in the oil industry
which requires that the polluter remediates.
The group alleges that the Director General of national Oil Spill Detection & Response Agency (NOSDRA), Dr
Bamidele Ajakaiye had said, at a two-day workshop organized by the agency for Environment Editors in Lagos, that
funds have been made available and that UNEP is in the process of opening an office in Port Harcourt for the
exercise.
According to the environmental group, "the agency claimed it had remediated over 400 impacted sites and is gradually
returning them to their natural state, while experts have been invited by government to cleanup the area around the
Warri Refinery".
ERA/FoEN criticized government's invitation of UNEP to do the cleanup, saying the process of achieving genuine peace
and reconciliation in the Niger Delta must not only be for the identification of problems that must be resolved, but
also spot and sanction those that were responsible for such actions.
"Whose funds will be used to do the cleanup? This decision is highly disappointing and in fact is a certificate for
Shell and its co-travellers in the oil industry to perpetrate more acts of environmental assault without taking
responsibility. Rather than the so-called cleanup, government should be funding a comprehensive environmental audit
of the Niger Delta," said ERA/FoEN executive director, Nnimmo Bassey.
Bassey frowned at what he described as " legitimization" of environmental degradation, insisting that spill figures
provided by NOSDRA is a conjecture and a far cry from actual statistics as many oil spill incidents in the Niger
Delta are unreported.
"It is unacceptable that government decided to take Shell's responsibility in Ogoniland and that of other polluting
companies in other parts of the region. Niger Deltans demand the list of the imaginary over 400 communities that were
polluted by oil companies and remediated by government."
"Sadly, nothing was mentioned about compensating impacted people or restoring their livelihoods which have been
destroyed in the oil spill incidents that always blamed on community people."
"Environmental Rights Action believes that it is intrinsically wrong for a United Nations agency to play the role of
a contractor to a polluter whereas they are better placed to demand that the polluter cleans up their mess. The
co-opting of the United Nations into this messy situation is an abuse of our collective sensibility."
