Niger Delta militant |
Some
Niger Delta militant groups that surrendered their arms under the
Federal Government’s amnesty programmes have threatened to resume
attacks within 14 days.
The
groups threatened that unless their demands were met in two weeks, they
would specifically target platforms that were important to the
"survival of the Nigerian economy."
The
warlords accused the Federal Government of a failure to pay their
monthly allowance and condemned the "deliberate refusal of the Mr.
Kingsley Kuku-led Presidential Amnesty Committee to recognise those who
had submitted their arms under the amnesty programme. Kuku is the
Presidential Adviser on Amnesty Programme."
The
ex-warlords under the Forum of All Ex-militant Leaders met on Saturday
in a location in the creeks and later issued a statement. Their
followers were also said to have been in attendance at the meeting. The
forum is led by ‘General’ Gift Tare of the Iduwini Volunteer Force.
In
a statement issued by the Forum at the end of the meeting, the leaders
of the groups, who described themselves as ‘Generals,’ urged government
to pay the regular monthly allowances of militants who had dropped their
arms.
"Except
these modest requests are granted within the next 14 days, the
Presidential Amnesty Committee should be ready for more face-off and
violent confrontations," the statement reads.
Kuku
had dismissed the protesters as disgruntled youths who were bent on
derailing the amnesty programme. He had also insisted that the youths
from the Niger Delta, who were currently agitating, did not submit their
arms before the closure of the amnesty window.
The
statement says the meeting, which lasted over six hours, "critically
reviewed the amnesty programme, the nonchalant attitude of the
implementers, the double standard applied to various ex-militants from
various ethnic nationalities and preference to fighters of some selected
‘Generals’."
They said they had resolved to employ the "instrument of violence" since the authorities had ignored their agitation.
The
group said, "Since the Mr. Kingsley Kuku-led Presidential Amnesty
Committee has decided to turn this well-thought out peace initiative of
our departed President and Apostle of peace, the late Alhaji Musa Umaru
Yar ‘adua into his private and family business, everything, including
violent confrontation should be adopted to correct this deliberate act
of one of our own, who has today turned himself into an oppressor of
sorts.
"That
the Federal Government should urgently probe the Presidential Amnesty
Committee as we have facts and figures to show that several persons who
are not even recognised ex-militants are not only benefitting from the
programme, but are today deciding the fate and destiny of known
ex-fighters and patriots of the Niger Delta emancipation."
The
ex-militants regretted the recent attacks on some vehicles owned by
newspaper houses, noting that the drivers of the vehicles simply
"refused to obey instructions."
The
group further demanded that the Federal Government should immediately
convene a stakeholders’ meeting where all aggrieved warlords would have
an opportunity to let out their frustrations with the amnesty programme.
The
Yar’Adua administration introduced an amnesty programme under which
militants in the Niger Delta submitted their arms in exchange for state
pardon, reintegration and retraining.
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