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RUMUEKPE PROTESTS OIL EXPLORATION IN THEIR COMMUNITY

By; DESIRE LORDSON

The Youths and Environmental Advocacy Centre, YEAC-Nigeria; said it received distress calls from youths of Rumuekpe Community in Emohua Local Government Area of Rivers State, alleging army invasion of their community’s protest ground, laying people down, destroying canopies, chairs, and torturing some others except.

Executive Director of YEAC-Nigeria, Dumnamene Fyneface, some youths of the community who are also members of Advocacy Centre’s “One Million Youth Volunteers Network of Human Rights Defenders and Promoters in the Niger Delta” said the Army personnels came to the protest ground at the community entrance by about 2AM and others by past 3AM of Thursday, October 5, 2023 with about ten Armored Personal Carriers and allegedly shooting into the air and eventually got some community people injured, scaring the protesters, dispersing elders and the youths, and later flogged women who remained adamant, refusing to leave the scene thus sustaining the protest that has lasted for over three weeks.

It would be recalled that the people of Rumuekpe, where four multinational and indigenous oil companies have been operating since 1956, took to the streets in protest, blocking the entrance to the community and demanding their inclusion in the pipeline surveillance contract awarded to a Security Agency and for the oil companies operating to fix the deplorable state of the only access road into the community that is no longer passable.

The protesters, numbering over 3,000, involved many community members, including chiefs, elders, youths, women, and children, gathering at the entrance to the community 24 hours a day, keeping vigil and preventing the company workers from accessing the community until their demands were met.

The protesters stay under erected canopies with chairs, cooking, drinking, and occupying the area under rain and sun to ensure that their demands, which also include youth employment and empowerment, are addressed.

They maintained that the oil and leadership-related crisis that engulfed the Rumuekpe community in 2005, leading to the killings of many people, the burning of houses, and the exiling of thousands, is still fresh in memory, with the footprints of the major crisis still visible in the community, and this current crisis should not be allowed to degenerate and repeat itself 18 years later, in 2023.

YEAC-Nigeria believes that with Rumuekpe as one of the ‘heartbeats’ of Nigeria’s oil production, with four companies and many crisscrossing pipelines that youths even vandalized periodically for artisanal refineries, it is imperative to naturally include them in the pipeline surveillance jobs to protect the oil facility; thus.

The group also called on the oil majors to address development and employment issues in Rumuekpe community to mitigate restiveness and achieve a smooth operating environment.

The Army and Multinational were yet to react to the development as at News time.

Signed

Dumnamene Fyneface

Executive Director of YEAC-Nigeria

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