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We’ll take control of our states’ oil and gas, if Zamfara state govt doesn’t stop handling gold deposits in his state – Gov Okowa threatens

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Delta State Governor Senator Ifeanyi Okowa said yesterday that no state law requires Zamfara State Government to regulate and handle gold deposits in the state, adding that the governors of the South-South region will soon take up the matter with the federal government.

Okowa, who spoke in Asaba, the state capital, during his 2020 quarterly media interaction, argued that what Zamfara state government was doing was obviously unconstitutional, threatening that if the matter was not properly handled, South-South governors would have no choice but to take control of their states’ oil and gas.

The governor, who stated that South-South governors believe in restructuring and resource management, indicated that on Friday, in Port-Harcourt, Rivers state, governors of the oil-rich region, ministers, lawmakers and other stakeholders will meet to deliberate and take a position on the matter and other issues.

He also applauded the efforts of the South-South Governors who he said though could do better, were already doing very well amidst the challenges they face in the development of their respective states.

According to him, “South-South governors before now have been talking about the need for restructuring and need for resource control, obviously we are on that because we feel there is the need to restructure not only the country, but the management of resources.

“But as at today, there are acts in the National Assembly that guide the issue of oil production and with the solid minerals, those are not covered in these acts and obviously, this is already a sore point in our nation’s governance system and we hope to express this very strongly during the meeting taking place in Portharcourt on Friday.

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“We cannot apply laws in our nation to the point that it becomes discriminatory because if people are allowed to process for their solid minerals, they should also be allowed to do same for their oil. So we are going to be very hard and try to make our voice as strong as possible during the meeting.

“I believe that at some point in time, these discriminatory tendencies will have to be revisited in our nation at some point in time.”

Speaking on the demands of oil bearing communities in the state to manage the 13 percent derivation accrued to them, the governor said: “I think it’s important that we put our energy in the right direction, because people have the wrong concepts on what needs to be done.

“I’m not a lawyer, but I believe that the constitution is very straight forward on how derivation monies should be handled and who should handle it.

“What we are doing as at today is to drive the process in the PIB where the oil bearing communities will have some leverages and be provided for in the law which allows them to have a percentage that will help them to strengthen the relationship between them and the oil companies.

“This is because if every community rises and say they want to control their resources, Nigeria will eventually become a banana republic and their will be no control, hence no country or state.

“Take a look at Delta State for instance, there are 20 or 21 LGAs that are oil producing, if every community tries to control its own, am sure that the crisis and battles that will come out of it will be beyond our control.

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“Though people have their views and they have the rights to such views, it is for us to follow the constitutionality and the laws of the land at the moment. I believe that having voted governors and lawmakers, we should allow them manage these resources and if they are not doing enough, we can vote them out in the next four years.

“Besides, it’s not a question of I want to manage the 13 percent, they ought to say they want to manage the 100 percent. What about the 87percent being shared among other States in the country?

“You did not push for the 87percent but it’s the 13 percent coming to the state that you want to manage, it does not make sense. Unfortunately, people just want to be heard and noticed.

“And by the time the governor’s are talking on their own, you are getting a group of communities talking and those ones have a different view point. By the time this division is created, what then happens? They will say we are singing in different tones, that you do not have a collective voice on the management of resources in your region.

“And this will divert the attention of adequate restructuring of the country the way we ought to talk about it. So there is a lot of politics going on, but I believe the governors of the South-South are doing well enough and having visited most states in the country, I can affirm that the South-South governors are indeed doing very well amidst the challenges we have to manage

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