Minister of Environment - Amina Mohammed while visiting one of the spilled sites |
The agitation of the Ogoni people over decades has caught up with listening ears as the Federal Government plans a clean-up of their land. The Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed, says
the clean-up of Ogoni land is just the beginning of many clean-ups that the
government will embark on in the Niger Delta region.
President Buhari will tomorrow, Thursday, June 2, fulfil
his campaign promise by launching the Ogoni clean-up project and Mrs Mohammed
stated that how to keep the Niger Delta clean from further pollution after the
clean-up is most important to the administration.
“Technologies are available, whether we are going to deal with the soil or the air and the gas flaring or we are going to be dealing with the water which is so contaminated.
“I think there is a broad knowledge of what is going to happen.” the Minister said while she was a guest on Channels Television’s Sunrise Daily on Tuesday.
Reacting to questions about the possibility of
totally restoring the polluted areas in less time than the stipulated 25 years,
the Minister noted that fixing the pollution cannot not be achieved in few
years considering how long the damaging activities have been going on in the
region.
“You’re not going to fix it in few years, no matter
what technology you have. You have massive areas of land. Remember I said Ogoni
is going to be our starting point, the rest of the Niger Delta is also polluted
in heavy ways, perhaps even more so than Ogoni land.
“Even though there have been no production in the last 20 years there are still illegal activities that again refill the pollution.”
She gave the assurance that the Ministry would be
deploying all available technologies and wealth of expertise from across the
world and also from scientists in Nigeria universities towards achieving the
targets.
The Minister of Environment also urged the Niger
Delta Avengers and other militant groups in the region to stop blowing up oil
installations and embrace the path of dialogue with the federal government.
According to the Minister, the act of blowing up oil
installations is not only criminal but its impact on the environment cannot be
quantified.
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