Search

Your opinion

Do you support Chief Obasanjo's advise asking President Yar'adua to resign on health grounds?

Lawmakers on hunger strike over oil wells
Written by Abdul-Rahman Abubakar & Turaki A. Hassan   
Thursday, 02 July 2009 22:20
Eleven lawmakers representing Cross River State in the National Assembly have embarked on two-weeks hunger strike to press for reversal of the decision of the Revenue Mobilization, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) and the National Boundary Commission (NBC) to allocate 76 disputed oil wells to Akwa Ibom State.

Briefing newsmen yesterday, the Cross River State caucus in the National Assembly led by Senator Bassey Ewa-Henshaw (PDP, Cross River South) described as fraudulent, moves by the agencies to deprive the state of revenue accruable from the disputed oil wells located in the maritime boundary with neighbouring Akwa Ibom State.

According to Senator Ewa-Henshaw: “Since some greedy brigands would rather see our people starve to death and our state brought to its knees, we as their representatives have decided to stand in unity with them. We will therefore, beginning immediately, embark on a two-week hunger strike to emphasize the seriousness of this situation and the collective pain we feel.”

Also commenting on the matter, Deputy Senate Leader Victor Ndoma-Egba (SAN) said “it is a moral weapon we are using to appeal to the conscience and sensitivity of Nigerians to feel how serious the matter is. We are a government that is governed by constitution, not by whims and caprices of some people.”

The Cross River lawmakers said the RMAFC and the NBC have wrongfully termed their state a non-oil producing state soon after Bakassi was ceded to Cameroun saying, “we are persuaded by these patently corrupt, illegal, unconstitutional and brazen actions to declare that the RMFAC has in this instance clearly acted against the collective national interest of all of us as Nigerians at the behest of invisible forces or interest and only the reversal of this decision by the Federal Government will mitigate the enormous injustice meted out to the people Cross River State.”    

Earlier Senator Ewa-Henshaw said the lawmakers from the state will exploit all available alternatives to reverse the decision of the government agencies including litigation.

“Bakassi was not ceded to Akwa Ibom State but to Cameroon.  Oil wells belonging to Cross River before ceding Bakassi can only be claimed by Cameroon or remain in Cross Rivers because this is the only area where territory changed hands.  Our decision to declare our stand now is born out of our strong desire for peace and our firm belief that for peace, unity and progress to reign, there is urgent need for the two States to work together in true partnership in which no party will fee shortchanged.  We fervently hope that common sense will prevail. A word is enough for the wise,” he said.

The lawmakers on hunger strike include; Senators Ewa-Henshaw, Ndoma-Egba and Greg Ngaji. From the House of Representatives, 8 members from Cross River State are currently on hunger strike. They include; Reps. John Eno, Alex Ukam, Bassey Ewa, Prince Bassey, Paul Ada, Gabriel Eddy and Chris Eta.

 

 


 

Add comment

•Comment Form Guidelines: The comment form must be filled in with a proper or legitimate sounding name and email address. Comments using keywords, spam or suspicious information in the comment form will be edited or deleted.
•Email Privacy: Email addresses are required for commenting, and they are not published on the site, nor shared. They may be used however in comments published in the print edition of our titles.
•Language and Manners: This site is “family friendly” and comments which include offensive or inappropriate language, or considered by the site administrator to be rude and offensive, will be edited or deleted.
•A Comment is a conversation: A comment which does not add to the conversation, runs of on an inappropriate tangent, or kills the conversation may be edited, moved, or deleted.
•What To Do If Your Comment Does Not Appear: If you leave a comment on this site and it does not appear, do not worry. It is only undergoing a mandatory review process to see if it meets the criteria listed above.
•No Personal Attack Comments Permitted: In the interest of fair play, no personal attacks are permitted in this site's comments. You may question or argue the content, but not attack the subjects in the item nor any other 'commenters'. Failure to respect fellow participants on this site could result in blocked access.
•Comment Spam: Any comment assumed to be possible comment spam will be deleted and marked as comment spam.
•Blocking: Anyone who violates this Comments Policy may be blocked from future access and/or commenting on this site.
•All Rights Reserved: The site owner (Media Trust Ltd) reserves the right to edit, delete, move, or mark as spam any and all comments. They also have the right to block access to any one or group from commenting or from the entire site.
•Hold Harmless: All comments within this site are the responsibility of the commenter, not the site owner. By submitting a comment on our site, you agree that the comment content is your own, and to hold this site, [www.dailytrust.com], and all subsidiaries and representatives harmless from any and all repercussions, damages, or liability.


Security code
Refresh