



Updating your news feed...

NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. Published by Africa’s international award-winning journalist, Mr. Isaac Umunna, NEWS EXPRESS is Nigeria’s first truly professional online daily newspaper. It is published from Lagos, Nigeria’s economic and media hub, and has a provision for occasional special print editions. Thanks to our vast network of sources and dedicated team of professional journalists and contributors spread across Nigeria and overseas, NEWS EXPRESS has become synonymous with newsbreaks and exclusive stories from around the world.

MOSOP President Fegalo Nsuke
Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has petitioned President Muhammadu Buhari over Federal Government’s planned resumption of oil production in Ogoniland. It said the purported move smacked of disdain and mockery of the Ogoni struggle against exploitation of international oil companies (IOCs) in the last three decades.
MOSOP President, Fegalo Nsuke, in the petition titled: Before Ogoni Is Killed Again, said the Ogoni was deeply concerned that rather than pursue reconciliation, the Buhari administration had begun taking steps that seems to return Ogoni people to repression and disharmony.
In the petition, which was presented to Secretary General of Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisations (UNPO), Ralph Bunche and European Union (EU) Secretariat at Brussels yesterday, Pyagbara said MOSOP received information from a leaked memo in which the President directed the NNPC/NPDC to take over operation of OML 11 with disbelief.
It would be recalled that OML 11 contained the Ogoni oilfields operated by Shell without regard to free, prior and informed consent of the Ogoni people nor consultations with them.“We had hoped that the Federal Government would adopt a new approach in dealing with this matter that recognises the issues Ogoni people had raised relating to company-community relations and benefits sharing in the event of resumption.
“We have been disappointed. The manner in which this matter had been handled reminiscent of the great partitioning of the Berlin Wall among invaders and colonizers is unacceptable to us. “The era in which some people sit in Abuja and partition people’s backyards and lands in the name of oil blocs and give them to their cronies without community input is over as it goes against internationally accepted best industry practices in the 21st Century. We cannot be treated as slaves in our own land,” the petition reads.
MOSOP told the President that the Ogoni people received the news of his commitment to the implementation of United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report released on August 4, 2011 with relief and appreciation, but that current development had dashed their hopes.
Responding, Bunche stressed that Ogoni people were a strategic partner to UNPO, promising that they would do all in their powers to ensure that global attention is drawn to the emerging conflict on government’s attempt to resume oil operations in Ogoni.
•Excerpted from The Guardian report

























