Commanding officer of the 3 Battalion, Lt. Col Igwe Omoke, has come up to say that Nigeria needs an entire army to protect its oil and gas assets.
Lt.-Col. Omoke made this disclosure when members of the House of Representatives Committee on Gas Resources visited the Nigeria Gas Company (NGC), in Warri, at the weekend.
He said the criminal justice system was a huge hindrance to efforts to protect critical national assets.
Lt.-Col Omoke, who escorted the lawmakers led by Fredrick Agbede, the committee’s Chairman, on a tour of the devastated Egwa 1 gas pipeline in Warri South West, said communities must guard oil facilities.
He said, “I think the issue is to find a holistic approach to dealing with this kind of situation and I am sure that your presence here is to kickstart the process of dealing holistically with this problem. When the incident happened, I dashed to Egwa 1. One thing that struck me was how can such a critical infrastructure not be manned? When we say we can do more, I think that is where it comes to play.
“It is vast; we are just talking about NGC, we have the SPDC, we have the Chevron, we have the Agip, so many of them with their pipelines crisscrossing the entire Niger Delta. So I want to say, Sir, that it will take an army, not a division, to man these pipelines. We also take care of other things.
“I can tell you that in the last one week I have received about 21 petitions, notifying the multinational companies of their intentions, I mean the communities writing to me, copying me their letters to the multinational oil companies, telling me their intentions to stop the activities of the multinational companies, as either not to pump crude or to stop their workers from coming to work, because of allegations, ranging from their inability to meet up with their GMOU to other things.
“When you say we should man those places, I think the army is doing its best. Immediately that thing happened, the first thing I did was to locate other critical areas, vulnerable points and man them. I asked the multinational companies to tell me other places, such as Egwa 1 Manifold that is not manned so that I can place my soldiers and that was what we did. You will recall that from then till now, we have not recorded any subsequent one, especially in those critical areas.”
The committee frowned at the recent vandalization of oil and gas facilities in the creeks of Delta State, describing it as criminal and unacceptable.
Agbedi, who spoke on behalf of the committee, urged the NGC to table its constraints, especially in the area of vandalism, promising to help the company to solve its problems.
Babatunde Bakare, the Managing Director of the NGC, cried out on the constant destruction of the company’s pipeline, describing it as a major challenge, to which the nation recently lost some 500 million mcf.
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