by Tim Elombah
The indigenous peoples of Niger Delta, under the
auspices of the Niger Delta Self Determination Movement (NDSDM), has launched a
movement to enable them secure the immediate political, as well as economic
interest in Nigeria.
The Niger Delta has thus demanded the ‘political
and economic restructuring of Nigeria to allow for political autonomy for our
peoples and 100% ownership and control of their resources from which they
shall remit fair and agreed royalties and taxes to the Federation of
Nigeria’.
It the explanatory note to the Niger Delta
Indigenous Peoples Charter made available to Elombah.com, they stated thus:
EXPLANATORY NOTE TO THE NIGER DELTA
INDIGENOUS PEOPLES CHARTER IN THE MATTER OF NIGER DELTA INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
CHARTER AND MATTER ARISING THEREFROM
A. The peoples
of the Niger Delta are to be found in the following six states; Akwa Ibom,
Bayelsa, Cross Rivers, Edo, Delta and Rivers states
B. The
Expropriatory Laws that sequestrated our oil and gas resources are hereunder
compartralized.
An index and sequence of such laws are as
follows;
Abrogation And Repeal Of All Laws That
Expropriate The Rights Of The People To Control Their Resources, Such As:
• Territorial
Water Act, Cap. T4 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• Exclusive Economic Zone Act, Cap. E17 Laws of
the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• Land Use Act,
Cap. L5 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2004
• Interpretation
Act, Cap.123 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• Oil pipelines
Act, Cap.07 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• Petroleum
Act, Cap. 07 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• Minerals and
Mining Act, CAP. M12 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004
• National
Inland Waterways Authority Act, Cap. N47 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria,
2004
• Section 44(3) of the 1999 Constitution.
C. The
sequential progression and retrogression of the principle of derivation is also
hereunder quintessentially serialized as follows.
The Derivation Principle 1951-1958:
(i) Hicks
Phillipson’s Commission Report (1951) – Derivation principles to the
Regions were stated as follows:
a. 50% of the
import and excise duties on tobacco.
b. 100% of the
import duty on motor spirit.
(ii) Chiks
Commission Report (1958) – Derivation was applied as follows:
a. Mineral
Royalties – 100% to the Region of extraction.
This recommendation was in operation for five
years from 1954-1959.
(iii) The
Raisman Commisson Report (1958) – The derivation principle was as follows:
a. Central
Government - 20%
b. Regions - 50%
c. Distributable
Pool Account - 30%
See the Revenue Mobilization Allocation and
Fiscal Commission (Review of the Revenue Allocation Formula) main report
(December 2002) at pages 8-19.
Federal – State percentage in petroleum proceeds,
1960-1999
Years Producing
State Federal Government
1960-1967 50 20
1967-1969 50 50
1969-1971 45 55
1971-1975 45
minus offshore proceeds 55 plus offshore
proceeds
1975-1979 20
minus offshore proceeds 60 plus offshore
proceeds
1979-1981 - 100
1982-1992 1 and
half 98 and half
1992-1999 3% 97
1999- 13% 87
D. We align our
struggle with Resolution 1803 of the United Nations, on Permanent Sovereignty
Over National Resources 1962 which supports our struggle for resource control
by providing thus;
“The rights of people and nations to permanent
sovereignty over their natural wealth and resources must be exercised in the
interest of their national development and of the people of the state
concerned…”
Indeed, the leading international scholar in his
seminal espouse titled Harris on Cases and Materials in International Law
(1998), Chapter 8 at page 549 submits that Resolution 1803 has been accepted in
a number of arbitration awards as reflecting customary international law. He
relied on the case of Texaco v Libya (1977) 53 ILR 389, (1978) 17 LLM 2 and
Kuwait v American Independent Oil Company (1982) 21 ILM 976.
Our call for resource ownership and control,
therefore, merely invokes and affirms Resolution 1803 as well as our right to
self-determination under United Nations Declaration on the Rights of the
Indigenous Peoples. We in the Niger Delta want to exercise, Permanent
Sovereignty over our natural resources and wealth and have the right to
determine our political, economic and development direction.
In the following document titled “The State Of
The Niger Delta By Niger Delta Self Determination Movement (NDSDM)”, they;
- condemned the
three months quit notice issued to the Igbos by the Arewa Youth Consultative
Forum and supported by the Northern Elders’ Forum (NEF);
- decried the
fallacious, deliberate and misinformative/disinformative falsehood by Ango
Abdullahi over Niger Delta in particular and the South in general;
- lamented that
the killing of their people “whenever they have attempted to assert their
rights to control their God given resources”;
- complained
bitterly how they have been shoved aside by northern oligarchs who now control
83 percent of oil well in Niger Deltaa;
- expressed
seriously disappointed on the position taken by the United Nations, on the quit
notice issued to the Igbos living in the North, by the Arewa people, by its
Country Resident Coordinator Mr. Edward Kallon.
- threw their
weight behind any group or people that wishes to embark on similar
self-determination course;
- Etc.
See the document below:
THE STATE OF THE NIGER DELTA BY NIGER
DELTA SELF DETERMINATION MOVEMENT (NDSDM)
We, the Niger Delta Self Determination Movement
(NDSDM), wish to on behalf of our people categorically condemn the three months
quit notice issued to the Igbos by the Arewa Youth Consultative Forum and
supported by the Northern Elders’ Forum (NEF) as clearly presented to the world
through their spokesman, Alhaji Ango Abdullahi.
We are also alarmed by the persistent but false,
malicious, provocative and unacceptable claims made by Alhaji Ango Abdullahi,
on behalf of the Northern Nigeria, that “Southern Nigeria was developed by
resources from the North”, and that “none of the Western and Eastern regions
had the money to effectively run the affairs of its region until they get
financial support from the Northern region”.
Furthermore, the fallacious, deliberate and
misinformative/disinformative falsehood by Ango Abdullahi, including the claim
that “money from the North was used to construct Nigerian Railways, refineries
and other facilities”.
And that the “First oil exploration was conducted
using money from groundnut pyramid, cotton, hide and skin among other cash
crops from Northern Nigeria”, are anti-historical and contrary to historical
facts and figures in the British archives and all other historical records
available to humanity.
It is on record, verifiable records, that before
and after the amalgamation of the Southern and Northern protectorates, without
the consent of the indigenous people of the Niger Delta, the North had been and
still remains dependent on the South for its economic and infrastructural needs
and wants like schools, hospitals, roads, workers’ salaries, etc.
It is on record that since the discovery of oil
in commercial quantities in Oloibiri in 1956, the indigenous peoples of the Niger
Delta have been excluded from the ownership, control and management of our
natural resources by the Nigeria federation through the expropriation of our
lands and resources by the Northern inspired and drafted military Constitution,
amongst all other obnoxious Decrees that were later converted to Acts.
Our people have been killed whenever they have
attempted to assert their rights to control their God given resources.
It is saddening that majority of oil wells in the
Niger Delta are owned and controlled by the Northern cabals and even the few
owned by our people have been fraudulently and forcibly taken from them.
Our people have been recently denied licenses for
modular refineries while persons from the Northern parts of Nigeria have had a
field day despite assurances to the contrary by the Nigerian state.
These acts of the Nigerian state is in breach of
Article 26 (1) of the UN Declaration on the Rights of the Indigenous Peoples
which guarantees the rights of the indigenous peoples to own, control and
manage their lands and any resources found thereon; and the Declaration 1 of
the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 1803 of 14 December 1962 on
Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources which provides that “the rights of
the peoples and nations to permanent sovereignty over their natural wealth and
resources must be exercised in the interest of their national development and
of the well-being of the people of the state concerned.”
We want to make it clear that no modular refinery
will be allowed to operate within the Niger Delta which is not owned and
controlled by our people.
And we further demand the immediate and
unconditional relocation of the corporate headquarters of all international and
national oil and gas companies including oil/gas servicing firms operating in
the Niger Delta. Enough is enough.
We are seriously disappointed on the position
taken by the United Nations, on the quit notice issued to the Igbos living in
the North, by the Arewa people, by its Country Resident Coordinator Mr. Edward
Kallon.
The statement is nothing but a gross disservice
to the very ideas and ideals of the UN, which through its various resolutions
and declarations have established the rights of indigenous peoples to
self-determination, civil protest and peaceful association.
Whilst Mr. Kalon is quick to preach peaceful
co-existence on behalf of the UN, he has failed to acknowledge, let alone
condemn the wanton killings of defenseless and innocent Christians in several
parts of Southern Nigeria and the Middle-Belt, including but not limited to
Enugu, Delta, Rivers, Ekiti, Ondo, Edo, Southern Kaduna, Jos, Agatu, Nimbo by
the Fulani herdsmen who have been identified as the fourth most deadliest
terrorist group by the global terrorism index.
The attempt by Mr. Kallon to justify the quit
notice order given by the Northern youths on the basis of the sit-at-home
strike of the Igbos to commemorate and mourn their loss during the civil war
and others killed before and thereafter; a right guaranteed by the UN
Declaration No. 2 of Resolution 1514 of 14 December 1960 and Article 3 of the
UN declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples smacks of double standards.
Consequently, the NDSDM condemns in the strongest
possible terms the position of the UN through its Country Resident Coordinator
which justifies the quit notice order given to the Igbos by the Northern
Youths.
Mr. Edward Kallon needs to be reminded that
self-determination is contained in all the main instruments of the United
Nations - the Charter and Inter-national Covenants on Human Rights in
accordance with the UN Charter identify Self-determination as a right of
peoples and is seen to be a fundamental human right forming part of the legal
system established by the Charter.
In conclusion, we, the Indigenous Peoples of the
Niger Delta demands the immediate and unconditional restructuring of the
current faulty, evil and anti-Niger Delta Unitary-Federal structure.
Gentlemen of the press, we hereby present to the
world the Niger Delta Indigenous Peoples Charter.
The struggle have just began.
Long Live the Indigenous peoples of the Niger
Delta!
Long live the Niger Delta!!
Finally, see attached “The Niger Delta Indigenous
Peoples Charter”:
THE NIGER DELTA INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
CHARTER
PREAMBLE
WE the people drawn from all the ethnic groups
within the area referred to and known as the Niger Delta of Nigeria have met to
discuss the survival of the indigenous peoples of the Niger Delta within
the Nigerian State.
After exhaustive deliberations by the
representatives of the ethnic nationalities of the Niger Delta it was observed
as follows;
A) that the area
referred to as the Niger Delta of Nigeria covers a total landmass of 20,000
square kilometres and is the largest wetland in Africa and the third largest in
the world.
B) That the area
referred to as Niger Delta has a population of 40 million going by the Nigerian
census figures of 2006.
C) That the Niger
Delta area today accounts for well over 90% of the oil and gas resources on
which the Nigerian state economic depends and is sustained.
D) That it was the
British colonialist that forcibly and without our consent put us under the
Nigerian state.
E) That before the
advent of the British colonialists the indigenous people in the Niger Delta
were not conquered by nor in servitude to ANY tribe or nationality
F) That right
from the time of the British colonialist till date our people have suffered
economic, political and environmental genocide.
G) That the quality of
life of the Indigenous Peoples of Niger Delta has deteriorated and continues to
deteriorate as a result of the deliberate neglect, provocative suppression,
political oppression and economic strangulation visited on our peoples by the
Nigerian state and their collaborative multinational oil companies.
H) That the consistent
struggle for political control and power is mainly about the struggle for easy
access and to control the oil and gas resources which account for well over 90%
of national revenue and foreign exchange earnings.
I) That
despite our huge contribution to the economic survival and political stability
of the Nigerian state our reward has been environmental degradation, military
suppressions and killings, intimidation and harassment and political
strangulation.
J) That
unabating and provocative damage done to our fragile environment and to the
health of our people is due in the main to uncontrolled exploration and
exploitation of crude oil and natural gas which has resulted in numerous oil
spills, uncontrolled gas flaring, destruction of forests, indiscriminate
canalisation, flooding, land subsidence, coastal/shore erosion etc. that our
people been farmers and fishermen have had their sources of livelihood
destroyed and degraded without any alternative economic source. That the
multinational oil companies have operated like a law unto themselves within the
protection of the Nigerian State.
K) That in order to
keep our people perpetually subservient to the Nigerian state and never having
the rule over our destinies, the Nigerian state has enacted obnoxious laws
which robs us of our natural rights to ownership and control of our land and
resource. Such undemocratic Nigerian State legislations as the Land Use Decree
of 1978, the Petroleum Decrees of 1969 and 1991, the Lands (Title Vesting etc.)
Decree No. 52 of 1993 (Osborne Land Decree), the National Inland Waterways
Authority Decree No. 13 of 1997 etc.
L) That the principle
of Derivation in Revenue Allocation has been consciously and systematically
obliterated by successive regimes of the Nigerian state. We note the drastic
reduction of the Derivation Principle from 100% (1953), 50% (1960), 45% (1970),
20% (1975) 2% (1982), 1.5% (1984) 3% (1992), to the current 13%.
M) That the continued
violence in the Niger Delta area is surreptitiously sponsored by the Nigerian
state with active connivance of the multinational oil companies with an aim to
keep our peoples distracted, divided and disunited in order to continue the
looting of our resources without let or hindrance.
Flowing from the foregoing, we, the indigenous
peoples inhabiting the area known and referred to as the Niger Delta of
Nigerian which have been balkanised into present day Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross
River, Delta, Edo and Rivers states, make the following resolutions to be known
and called the NIGER DELTA INDIGENOUS PEOPLES CHARTER:
That the indigenous peoples of Niger Delta demand
the political and economic restructuring of Nigeria to allow for POLITICAL
AUTONOMY for our peoples and 100% ownership and control of our resources
from which we shall remit fair and agreed royalties and taxes to the
Federation of Nigeria.
That the indigenous peoples of Niger Delta
further demand our right and freedom for self-determination as enshrined in the
UN Declarations of Indigenous Peoples and the African Charter on Human and
Peoples Rights.
We affirm our support to ANY OTHER Indigenous
Peoples’ struggle for self-determination within the Nigerian State. We express
our solidarity with all organisations in Nigeria and elsewhere who are
struggling for self-determination and justice. In particular we note the
struggle of the IPOB/MASSOB, Oodua Peoples Congress/ Afenifere, Middle Belt
Forum, etc
Furthermore we demand the immediate convocation
of a Sovereign Conference of Ethnic Nationalities made up of equal
representatives of ALL identified ethnic nationalities within the Nigerian
State to deliberate on the Nigerian situation and produce a peoples’
Constitution. The Government of the Nigerian State or any political party shall
not nominate any representative to the Conference.
The indigenous peoples of Niger Delta therefore
totally reject the oppressive and genocidal internal colonialism and calls for
a new order in Nigeria, an order in which our indigenous Peoples shall have
full responsibility for their own affairs.
We aver that failing the above by the Nigerian
State we the Indigenous Peoples of the Niger Delta shall have no other
alternative than to trigger Article 3 of the United Nations Declaration on the
Rights of Indigenous Peoples to Self Determination to freely determine our
political status and freely pursue our economic, social and cultural
development.
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