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Home NEWS Senate directs NLNG to pay Rivers communities N18.4bn compensation

Senate directs NLNG to pay Rivers communities N18.4bn compensation

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The resolutions were adopted after the Senate considered the report of its Committee on Ethics, Privileges And Public Petitions that investigated a petition by the communities.

By Jeffrey Agbo

The Senate on Tuesday directed the Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited to, within 60 days, pay N18.4 billion compensation to 73 communities of Obiafu, Soku to Bonny in Rivers for acquiring their land and loss of use of the affected land to pipeline Rights of Way through the communities.

The resolutions were adopted after the Senate considered the report of its Committee on Ethics, Privileges And Public Petitions that investigated a petition by the communities.

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Presenting the report, the Committee chairman, Senator Patrick Akinyelure said following its incorporation, the NLNG acquired landed properties in Rivers state spanning over 210 kilometres for use as its pipeline’s Right of Way which ended at the export terminal of the NLNG in Finima, Bonny Local Government of the state.

According to him, “That there were over 73 communities and over 200 families whose hitherto agrarian source of livelihood were negatively impacted upon by the said acquisition.

“That after the recent intervention of the Senate and after being given one month instead of 7 days allowed by the Senate to provide evidence of payment to the Committee, the NLNG could only show evidence of payment to some individuals, families and communities.

“The total amount it paid for part of the 210 kilometres of land acquired for pipelines Rights of Way was N74,642,773.00 which is not significant when compared to the sum of N18.4 billion approximately demanded by the 73 communities and over 200 families, which has never been objected to by the NLNG up till now.

“That the payment made covered only 39 communities and 73 individuals and families; and that there was no Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU) signed between the communities and NLNG on future obligations in the name of Corporate Social Responsibility with the impacted communities.

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“There was evidence that other oil companies such as Shell Petroleum Development Company, Totalfina, Elf Petroleum, Agip Oil Company paid compensation for the loss of use of land to their host communities.

“NLNG confessed that the payments were made long ago and could not reasonably trace most of the payments documents but promised look for further evidence to show that it paid stakeholders concerned if given another one month to enable do so.

“The committee considered their request unnecessary and unreasonably, having granted NLNG one month earlier instead of 7 days allowed by the Senate at plenary to conclude its report.”

Meanwhile, the Senate on Tuesday suspended consideration of the report of its Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions urging the National Security Adviser to vacate the request he made to the DSS to watch list one Sunny Ofehe.

The suspension of the report followed observations by many Senators that watchlisting citizens is one of the ways of monitoring crime suspects by security agencies.

They argued that it would amount to meddlesomeness to direct the DSS to vacate the watch list placed on the petitioner.

Presenting the report earlier,  Akinyelure said the DSS confirmed that it placed MOfehe on watch list on June 3rd, 2009 following a request from the office of the NSA via a letter with reference number NSA/INT/366/S, dated May 28th 2009.

He said, “In the latter, the petitioner was accused of being a self-acclaimed activist and President/Founder of Hope For the Niger Delta Campaign (HNDC) who went to the Netherlands and sought political asylum on the basis of a false claim that the Federal Government of Nigeria assassinated his mother in the course of the Niger Delta crisis.

“He was also accused of using his organisation to swindle money from the Dutch government and other environmental organisations under the guise of facilitating peace process in the Niger Delta.”

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