Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, yesterday dared the odds, by visiting the volatile Bori in Ogoniland.
This comes a week after hoodlums disrupted his rally, shooting
sporadically into the crowd. Scores were injured after the attack.
It had been reported of how thugs armed with different dangerous
weapons were seeen loitering around the venue of the Save Rivers
Movement rally.
Sounds of gunshots were heard by residents as early as 3am. Sources say the action was to scare people away from the event.
Speaking at the rally which eventually held under police protection
in and around the area, Amaechi blamed the Police Commissioner, Mr.
Joseph Mbu, for allowing militants take up arms against the people.
”The same people (militants) we chased away with the military are
back to our state, fuelled by a man called Mbu and his cohorts in
Abuja.
“They do not mind that your lives are important. They want to
sacrifice your lives just to earn the office of presidency and the
office of governorship,” Amaechi told his supporters at Saints’ Anglican Church premises.
He berated an ex-militant who was said to have masterminded last week’s shooting.
”In 2007, this territory (Ogoni) belonged to one man called
Solomon. I learnt he came to shoot here (Bori). Nobody could gather.
Police could not even gather here. They were being shot at. I bought for
the police 7 APCs (Armoured Personnel Carriers). They were afraid,” he said.
This time, the rally organised by Save Rivers Movement (SRM) was
peaceful with armed policemen providing security in and around the area.
He said the release of the funds would have transformed the four local government areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme.
“UNEP finished all it needed to do and recommended that at least
$1 billion was required to cleanup Ogoni and develop the Ogoni people,” Amaechi said.
He further took a swipe at President Goodluck Jonathan, saying “Have
you seen the $1 billion (from the federal government) and they want you
to vote for them? It will be a foolish man that will vote for the
person, who denies you your rights.
“ÜNEP asked Federal
government to spend $1billion in Ogoni to change things, they said no.
$49.8 billion is missing. If they say $49.8 billion is not missing, let
them tell us where the money is. Let them publish. It is in their
pocket.”
“Without the UNEP report, the federal government cannot develop
Ogoni. You are all suffering. You cannot fish. You cannot farm because
your land is polluted.”
He called on the Ogoni and the people of the state to stand up to whoever might want to intimidate them for political gains.
Continuing, “I do not want to come back to Ogoni to hear that you
were shattered. I do not want you to take the law into your own hands
but I want you to make sure that nobody shoots at you.
“They (gun-wielding militants) are all human beings. They are not
ghosts. They are neither angels nor devil. They are human beings like
you. If a man slaps you and gets away with it, tomorrow, he will come
back.
“The history of Ogoni is replete with struggle. They killed Ken
Saro-Wiwa (during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha on November
10, 1995).Is the struggle over?
“The man said you might take away my life but you would not take
away the idea. You can kill the messenger, not the message. The idea of
the liberation of the Ogoni people, is it not still on? I have been part
of that idea.”
On party politics, he said: “PDP claims to be the biggest party
in Nigeria. APC is the fastest -growing party in Nigeria. Then, there
was no ACN, no CPC, only PDP in Rivers State. Now, they have seen
another party, why are they afraid?
“Why are they fighting? Why are they shooting? Why are they using policemen? They should allow voting to take place.”
In a solidarity message from his sick bed abroad, Senator Magnus Abe,
who was hit by a rubber bullet at an earlier rally praised the people
for attending the event, saying violence cannot subdue the spirit of a
free people.
Abe, an Ogoni, who monitored the inauguration and rally from London,
noted that the successful hosting of the event “in the face of threats
and intimidation was a confirmation that the principle of non-violence
with which Ogoni heroes fought the then federal military government and
multinational corporations was still the best weapon.”
He praised Amaechi for his courage and exemplary commitment to Ogoni
course, saying: “the governor was ready to take the first bullet for
Ogoni. His courage, doggedness and commitment to truth continue to
justify the decision of true Rivers people to stand with him in the
defence of our state.”
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