Imo Govt. Spends N65m monthly on Security of Oil Communities

Amby Uneze in Owerri

Imo State government has revealed that it spends N65 million monthly to maintain security and peace in the oil communities in the state without the oil companies contributing to it. Governor Rochas Okorocha disclosed this yesterday when the stakeholders in the oil sector comprising the state government, Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr. Ibeh Kachukwu, Oil Companies, traditional rulers from the Oil Producing Areas of Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta local government areas met at the Government House Owerri to deliberate on issues concerning the Oil Producing Communities.

Welcoming the Minister, representatives of the Oil Companies and the Stakeholders from Oil Producing Communities to the meeting, Governor Okorocha stated that the Oil Companies Operating in Imo State behave in a manner that create crisis for the State and problems among the youths and stakeholders in the Oil Producing Communities through factionalisation and cult activities which always lead to killing among the communities themselves.

He said “today the State government spends almost N65 million monthly to pay Security agencies to maintain peace in Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta. Meanwhile, we don’t benefit directly. Last time we carried out an amnesty programme where we had to engage 2,833 youths. And every day, most of them are on our payroll just to stop the arms and the avengers.”

He continued “again the Federal Government promises to Ohaji/Egbema and Oguta LGAs when the Vice President came here are yet to be fulfilled. I spoke with him and he promised that something is going to be done. I hope something will be done immediately.”

On the abandoned skill acquisition Centre in Ohaji/Egbema, he said, “we agreed with the Federal Government to turn it into University of Science and Technology, but as at my last discussion with the Vice President, we agreed that it should be turned into a University of Agriculture.

That will help our people instead of abandoning huge that completed project.
“The 330Mw Egbema Gas Plant abandoned which was wrongly contracted and wrongly executed has been lying there for the past Seven years and that is a monumental waste. Over $740 has been wasted. Yet they cannot produce one light bulb. So, I have asked the Federal Government to allow the State take over the plant.”

The Minister told the stakeholders that the aim of the meeting was to find lasting solution to the problems in the Oil Producing Communities, adding that at the end of the deliberations a technical committee would be set up to harness and streamline all the discussions including the grievances for actions.

According to him “Oil will not be an asset in the next 30 years. So, the host Communities should maximise their benefits now and put it to proper use and Oil Companies must start negotiating with the host Communities and the government to know exactly what they need as part of their corporate responsibilities.”

A traditional ruler from the Oil Producing Areas, HRH Eze Emmanuel Assor said “the Oil Companies have failed in their corporate responsibilities to the Communities and that the trend must change for the sake of peace in the Oil Producing Communities.”

Prof. Maurice Iwu who spoke on behalf of the Imo Economic Development Initiative, asked the Federal Government to remove all the bottlenecks holding the State Government from taking over the Power Plant at Egbema as the State has the Capacity to attract investors to complete the plant, adding too that the Industrial Park the State Government was building did not require cash from the Federal Government, but only validation.

At the end of the deliberations which lasted for hours, a technical Committee was set up with Engineer Kingsley Uju representing the government as the head, while two people from the Federal Ministry of Petroleum and one member each from the Oil Companies and two members from the Oil Communities are members.

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