Thursday 12 March 2015

$16BILLION EXXON MOBIL OIL SPILL COMPENSATION TEARS NIGER DELTA COMMUNITIES APART

Some Niger Delta communities are presently protesting in Yenagoa Bayelsa state over the whereabout of $16billion oil spill compensation paid by Exxon Mobil.

Report has it that Bayelsa State was on Wednesday grounded as angry communities affected and  devastated took to the street to protest diversion of $16 billion paid as compensation by Exxon Mobil for an oil spill in their communities in 1998.

The protesters representing over 87 communities from Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Edo, Cross Rivers and Ondo insisted that after 15 years of agitating for compensation for destruction of their means of livelihood by the oil spill, they were yet to receive the money even when they heard that the money has been paid.

They reported carried placards with inscriptions such as “Stop using our money to sponsor  political parties ; Exxon Mobil: All we need is our money since 1998; Exxon Mobil: Refuse to pay our money: face war”, accused their lawyer for collecting the money and refusing to remit it to the affected people. A statement read by Comrade Godwin Roberts in behalf of affected communities accused their lawyer of secretly collecting the compensation and refusing to pay the impacted communities.

They also accused their lawyer of diverting the compensation to personal use and sponsorship of some politicians and called on members of the security agencies and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to look into the matter.

Source Vanguard

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