The Defence headquarters had scrapped
the Operation Pulo Shield and replaced it with Operation Delta Safe,
which was designed to ensure security and protection of oil
installations in the Niger Delta.
The new Task Force, with its operational
headquarters in Yenagoa, is designed to have three sectors and five
operational bases to cover the entire Niger Delta.
The Acting Director, Defence
Information, Brig. Gen. Rabe Abubakar, said the military authorities
would ensure effective equipment for the new task force to enable it to
achieve the purpose for which it was established.
Although Abubakar neither confirmed nor
denied the planned deployment of troops, he explained that the
“reorganisation of the task force” was in the interest of the country
and would have the best arsenal and equipment.
He said, “The overhauling was meant to
ensure pro-activeness of the new outfit. We will, as much as possible,
continue to inject new system, new equipment and new prescriptions to
ensure that what happened before will not happen now.
“And so, the Defence Headquarters came
up with the reorganisation, and it meant well for the country and it
meant well for the industries there. So we are doing all these things to
ensure that we do our best, with the best arsenal, with the best
equipment, so that we can handle the security threat.
“But injecting new men or injecting more
men is not the issue. The most important is that the reorganisation has
been done and it is for the goodness of country, for the good of that
general area.
“And we will do everything to secure all
necessary spots, human, equipment and what have you to ensure that it
performs optimally.”
Meanwhile, the Federal Government will
soon publicise its official position as regards the conditions set out
by the militant group, the Niger Delta Avengers, for peace talks on the
ongoing security threat in the Niger Delta region.
The NDA had, on Saturday, asked
President Muhammadu Buhari to visit the Niger Delta region to see the
difficulties the dwellers were experiencing despite the huge revenue
accruable to the country from the region.
Buhari had, on Friday, reportedly appealed to the group “in God’s name” to stop destroying oil installations.
On when the government would visit the
region officially based on the militants’ request, officials at the
Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation said the Federal Government was working on the
issue and would make its position public very soon.
“Any official position from the
government will be issued very soon on this development, but I cannot
tell when precisely,” the spokesperson for the NNPC, Mr. Garba-Deen
Mohammed, told one of our correspondents on Sunday in Abuja.
“It is going to come from the
government. This thing is a very delicate issue and it is not something
that one will just make or issue a statement about because it concerns
all of us.
“So it is not just a petroleum ministry
or NNPC issue. It is something that affects us all and so the government
is working on the matter.”
Another official at the petroleum ministry told The PUNCH on
Sunday that the Office of the National Security Adviser and the
Presidency were collaborating with the ministry as the Minister of State
for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, was among key government
officials involved in talks with the militants.
“As you know, the Minister of State
(petroleum resources) is among those spearheading talks and, of course,
we are working with other agencies of government on this issue and very
soon, an official position will be made public,” the official, who spoke
to one of our correspondents on condition of anonymity, said.
The Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake
Dickson, has said dialogue remains the only solution to the crisis in
the Niger Delta region.
Speaking with reporters after his
conferment with a honourary Doctorate Degree in Public Administration by
the Ekiti State University, Ado Ekiti, on Saturday, Dickson, while
admitting there were grievances in the region, advised parties to
embrace peace in resolving the insurgence.
He received the honour alongside the
Chancellor of the University and the Alara of Aramoko Ekiti, Oba Abdul
Azeez Adeyemi, and the Ekiti State-born legal practitioner, Mr. Gbenga
Oyebode, who is also involved in banking and oil and gas industries.
Dickson said, “We are all concerned
about the development; all the leaders there are concerned about the
recent tough surge of insurgency. We are collaborating on the way
forward.
“Those of us, who are governors in our
states, are working hard with traditional leaders and opinion leaders
and security agencies and also collaborating with other private and
corporate bodies to ensure that we put it under control.
“The way forward is not war, war. It is
jaw-jaw. The way forward is peace and dialogue, it is consensus building
and that is quite what some of us are in support of.
“We are not in support of violence; we
are not in support brigandage. We are not in support of destruction of
strategic national assets and killings. We know there is an issue and
this issue can only be addressed when all stakeholders work together for
unity, peace, prosperity and stability and progress of our country.”
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