Officials conniving with vandals must be sanctioned, prosecuted ---Lawan
(Nigeria) President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, on Tuesday said officials of government conniving with criminals involved in vandalising oil pipelines should be sanctioned and prosecuted if identified.
Lawan stated this in his remarks after the consideration of the
report of the Ad-Hoc Committee on Pipeline Explosions during plenary.
Accordingly, Lawan directed the Senate Committee on
Petroleum (downstream) to invite the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC,
with a view to ensuring a review of security measures for pipelines in parts of
the country.
The Senate President also said the National Assembly will
amend the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency, NOSDRA Act to
prevent the activities of pipeline vandals that leads to explosions and deaths.
He said: “Our Committee on Petroleum (downstream) should
invite the NNPC with a view to know what they have been doing over the years to
secure the pipelines; what measures are in place and whether there is need to
review these agreements.
“This is a multi-billion dollar industry. People consciously
do these things, it’s not an accident. Those who are caught in the fires or who
come to scavenge are the ones who end up losing their lives. This is not
acceptable.
“There must be sanctions, somebody will have to pay the
price and of course, after these resolutions are sent to the executive, our
committee must follow it up.
“When we have to amend the NOSDRA Act, this is something
that we have to do expeditiously. We should do it because it will help in
preventing or minimising reoccurrence of these criminal acts."
Earlier in his contribution to the debate on the report, Senator
Chukwuka Utazi (PDP, Enugu North) blamed the activities of pipeline vandals on
officials of the NNPC.
The lawmaker, therefore, called for the introduction of
punishment for any official of the corporation caught conniving with pipeline
vandals.
“If there is no punishment for any offence, the tendency
that it will be repeated severally will be there.
“The people in NNPC must find those people and discipline
them. I’m suggesting that the downstream committee should follow up this issue
to make sure those people managing these pipelines face the music. We have to
get these people and ensure they are punished,” Utazi said.
The lawmaker also called for the amendment of the NOSDRA
Act.
“Let us get all these laws concerned with the regulation of
the petroleum industry amended holistically,” he added.
Another lawmaker, Senator Ibrahim Musa (APC, Jigawa North)
said the government should “focus on the criminal rings responsible for the
initial pipeline breakage.”
Senator Rochas Okorocha (APC, Imo West), who described
pipeline vandalism as an act of economic sabotage, called on the Federal
Government to subject the surveillance of oil pipelines to contractual
arrangements with private firms.
Senator Ibikunle Amosun (APC, Ogun Central), accused the
NNPC of conniving with vandals to sabotage the economy by encouraging the
activities of oil pipeline vandals.
“This is not an act of negligence but connivance. The NNPC
knows what to do and cannot claim ignorance.
“The NNPC knows from their office when a pipeline is
vandalised. I want to support my colleagues that they should be punished.”
According to the Ad-Hoc committee’s report, the incidences
of pipeline explosions in Rivers and Lagos States would have been avoided if
the NNPC/Nigerian Pipeline Storage Company, NPSC and contractors monitoring the
pipelines were proactive.
Chairman of the Ad-Hoc Committee, Senator Ibrahim Gobir,
said both NNPC/NPSC and the contractor were aware of the Komkom pipeline leakage
in Rivers State, two days before the explosion but delayed in taking necessary
action.
The lawmaker disclosed further that both NNPC/NPSC and the
Oilserv contractor were aware of the intended activity of the vandals and the
leakage a week and a day respectively, before the Ijegun explosion in Lagos
State.
He added that security personnel in connivance with NPSC
staff collaborated with the vandals to siphon petroleum products from the
pipelines.
The Senate, after consideration of the report on pipeline
explosions, adopted all 15 recommendations by the Ad-Hoc Committee.
Accordingly, the Senate recommended that the NNPC without
further delay should embark on Horizontal Directional Drilling, HDD, in re-laying pipelines especially in
identified hotspots where erosion has exposed the pipelines to the surface.
The upper chamber also recommended that the NNPC involve
members of host communities in pipeline surveillance within their various areas
as an interim preventive measure.
The Senate further recommended the deployment of modern
technology in pipeline surveillance and detection of leakages as well as the
introduction of “cathodic prevention of the pipelines”.
It also directed NNPC to refund to the Treasury, the
“outrageous” sum N382,203,055.74, it claimed to have used in firefighting
operation in Komkom and provide evidence of compliance to the Senate Committee
on Downstream Petroleum Sector.
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