IJAW elders in Delta State, yesterday, said it was
impracticable for them to hand over the former General Officer Commanding, GOC,
of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, Government
Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, to security agencies because they neither have the
power to do so nor know his (Tompolo) whereabouts currently.
They also said that they do not have any information that
Tompolo was involved in the three-day bombing of crude oil and gas pipelines in
the state, while many see the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC’s
case against him as a form of persecution.
The Federal Government, last weekend, asked Ijaw communities
to hand over suspects involved in the
bombing, alleged to be hiding in their areas, to security agencies, while the
Joint Task Force, JTF, had earlier threatened to hold community leaders
responsible for further acts of pipeline vandalism in their communities.
Chairman, Ijaw (Izon) Okosu –Otu (Ijaw Council of
Elders), Delta State, Chief Bare Etolor, said, “It is unfair for the Federal
Government to ask Ijaw communities to handover suspects that carried out the
bombing because we do not know them. In addition, I do not see how anybody
expects us to handover Tompolo to security agencies because we do not have the
power to do that, except they want to humiliate us.”
Another Ijaw leader in Gbaramatu Kkingdom, Chief
Godspower Gbenekame, who re-echoed Etolor’s position, said it was impossible
for them to handover Tompolo to the government.
Some Niger Delta and Ijaw youth groups, including the
Niger Delta Security Watch Organszation of Nigeria, NWSON and Ijaw People’s
Development Initiative, IPDI, threw their weight behind the elders, saying that
the understanding of many Ijaw people was that the government was persecuting
Tompolo because he refused to join the All Progressives Congress, APC.
However, Executive Director of Centre for the Vulnerable
and Underprivileged, CENTREP, Warri, Delta State, Mr. Oghenjabor Ikimi, said
there was nothing wrong in the residents of the affected areas and ex-militants
giving useful information to security agencies to unmask the culprits.
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