The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND, has warned communities in the Niger Delta providing cover for criminals such as members of the Niger Delta Avengers, NDA, that they were not protected by the extant principles of international and/or municipal law during a conflict.
This is even as it disclosed in statement by its spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, that many members of the Niger Delta Avengers involved in the current bombings of oil installations in the region were mostly its former commanders and fighters that accepted amnesty from the Federal Government in 2009 without clear understanding.
Its words: “However, we hereby remind our communities, which harbour criminals such as members of the NDA that their communities are not protected by the extant principles of international and/or municipal law during a conflict.”
Notwithstanding, the group urged “the Nigerian military high command to stick to the rules of engagement and international best practices.”
The group commiserated with the affected persons, families and communities and called on the international community as well as the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to dispatch relief materials to the region, as a matter of utmost priority.
“The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, MEND notes with grave concern the recent renewed spate of unprovoked and persistent attacks on Nigeria’s oil installations by the Niger Delta Avengers, NDA, many of whom were MEND’s commanders and fighters who jumped on the Presidential Amnesty gravy train without knowing why they took up arms in the first place.
MEND accused the region’s elite of going “to sleep in luxury hotel suites in Abuja and around the world for the entire duration of the 6 years of Mr. Jonathan’s binge and unmitigated disaster as President.”
It, however, commended President Muhammadu Buhari for his political will and sagacity in commencing the clean up of Ogoni land in Niger Delta region with the June 2 launch and implementation of the United Nations Environmental Programme UNEP, Report.
The militant group said Buhari’s decision was heartwarming in view of the fact that a son of the region, former President Goodluck Jonathan, was in charge for six years and did nothing about the clean up.
Even as the Federal Government had ordered a two-week ceasefire, it said: “Nevertheless, equally of grave concern to MEND are the disproportionate use of force and the sheer unimaginable dimension of the ongoing reprisal Nigerian military onslaught in the Niger Delta region.”
It bemoaned “the attendant collateral damage done to the political, social and economic lives of the ordinary people, especially in the Ijaw communities.
(Today.ng)