Skirting the Niger Delta quagmire
In
the fullness of time, Niger Delta will define the Buhari presidency.
It’s a toss-up between fate and hard choices! So, it behooves the
presidency to think of how best to skirt the Niger Delta quagmire. They
should consider soft power ideas, while remaining mindful that seeking
military solutions to domestic problems is not always prudent.
Nigeria’s
stressed economy is creeping toward stagnancy. The oil sector stands
decimated by agitating Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) and Red Egbesu Water
Lions. The recidivism in militancy is not an aberration, since there’s
cause and effect. Unfortunately, the lines between agitation and
criminality are now blurred. Ahead of Buhari’s presidency the status quo
in the Niger Delta was forecasted.
Inexplicably,
President Buhari cancelled his visit to Ogoni on 2nd June 2016.
Speculatively, the cancellation was “because of ill-health” or “because
of a credible threat by militants.” Regardless, cancelling such a
strategic visit was a lost opportunity. By not going to Ogoni, the
President gave the militants a psychological edge, while unwittingly
creating the impression that he “does not believe our military is
capable of securing his visit.” Awkwardly, our Niger Delta policymakers
seem inclined to pro forma bureaucratic acts, and less so, strategic
considerations. Thus, they make tackling the Niger Delta conundrum seems
all too confounding. It should not be, if our policymakers dare to drop
their blinkers.
Nigeria
must draw lessons from history. Just as the Niger Delta crisis can’t be
wished away; it can’t be solved militarily. The crisis is replete with
broken promises that match broken communities; and broken lives that
match a blighted environment. Niger Delta noxiousness is also
proportionally matched by Niger Delta policy toxicity. The Rivers State
people repudiated secession in 1967, and by foreswearing Biafra, helped
to keep Nigeria one. Their latter day reward is environmental
disfigurement and squalor; officious indifference and pious
reassurances. But Niger Delta is not Nigeria’s only peculiar challenge.
There was Bakassi. Despite his brusqueness, former President Olusegun
Obasanjo spared Nigeria by negotiating the 12 June, 2006 Greentree
Agreement on Bakassi. Without that accord, Bakassi would today be a
war-torn territory. Though Niger Delta crisis seems intractable, what
Buhari needs are seminal ideas for ending the crisis, not its
militarization.
Meanwhile,
the activities of Niger Delta Avengers are deemed “a serious threat to
the Nigerian economy that the government must address with utmost speed
and seriousness.” Besides reducing our oil production capacity from 2
million to 1.2 million barrels per day, there is clear and present
danger of the crisis escalating. These challenges offer Buhari a unique
opportunity to exert leadership. However, the resort to militarism as a
solution is ill-advised.
Whereas
Buhari extended the amnesty programme from 2015 to 2018, there was
neither proper communication of the decision nor a white paper on it.
Hence the agitators believed that a policy reversal was in the offing,
more so, since the decision to “crush the militants” was being
underscored.
The
absence of creative problem-solving ideas remains a critically missing
link, despite the overused cliché of “thinking outside the box”. It’s
the non-application of creative ideas that led the government into the
trap of brickbats, muscle-flexing, threats and use of force.
There’s
also the mislaid perception that policies of the Jonathan
administration were skewed, simply because President Jonathan was from
that region. Fraught as the policy were with leakages, it brought some
reprieve. Admittedly, there are legitimate concerns that ongoing
agitations now border on criminality, and transcend constitutional and
human rights demands. Yet, it’s spurious to use such concerns as basis
for ending amnesty. Also, such concerns hardly make militarization of
the crisis preferable to dialogue. If the government can’t handle the
Niger Delta crisis directly, it should secure the services of
international arbiters, who can map the crisis, and proffer acceptable
solutions.
Buhari
needs urgent solutions. A ‘Marshall Plan’ type plan-of-action that
confers unfettered ownership of restorative plans, projects and
programmes on the inhabitants is imperative. The plan must tackle legacy
and residual issues, especially tail-end-liability of oil companies
that contributed to the blight. They must underwrite the 2011 UNEP
Environmental Restoration Fund. Because successive governments tried
military solutions and failed, it should be avoided. Government’s
engagement must aim at bridging the distrust gap and improving
infrastructural, economic, social and environmental conditions of Niger
Delta.
While
the Ministry for Niger Delta Affairs and the NDDC should retain their
statutory roles, Buhari should appoint an independent high-level Special
Envoy or Joint-Envoys, to drive the Niger Delta peace process, do the
heavy lifting and help in settling the Niger Delta crisis at the
negotiation table.
*Obaze, is MD/CEO of Selonnes Consult Ltd
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