Samuel, Umaru Tsaku and Tedheke, Moses E. U. (2021) Consolidating Peace in the Niger Delta for National Development in Nigeria: Rising Beyond Tokenism. Asian Research Journal of Arts & Social Sciences, 14 (3). pp. 24-41. ISSN 2456-4761
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Abstract
Consolidating Peace in the Niger Delta for National Development in Nigeria: Rising Beyond Tokenism Umaru Tsaku Samuel Moses E. U. Tedheke
This study attempts an investigation into oil politics and other related issues that have generated security crisis in the Niger Delta region, which made peace to elude the people over the years. For decades, peace in the Niger Delta remains a mirage because of the violence and counter violence unleashed by the different stakeholders in oil production in the Niger Delta. While the militants in the Niger Delta resorted to kidnapping of expatriates, oil theft, and the destruction of oil installations of the international oil companies to register their grievances against the Nigerian state and international oil companies over the debilitating development conditions in oil producing communities, the Nigerian state had militarized the region to maintain law and order in the oil producing areas in order to secure oil installations of the international oil companies which were targeted for destruction by the militants who felt the federal government and oil companies have not done enough to improve the living conditions of the people. To pacify the Niger Delta people and to ensure seamless oil production in the region, the federal government introduced some initiatives and created different Commissions such as the Oil Mineral Producing Areas Development Commission, increased derivation formula in revenue allocation to 13 percent and the establishment of the Niger Delta Development Commission to engender peace and development in the region. In recent times however, the federal government in furtherance of its commitment to resolve the Niger Delta crisis created the Ministry of Niger Delta and equally granted Amnesty for repentant militants with a view to re-integrating them back to the society in the interest of national peace and development. Except for Amnesty Programme which introduced relative peace in the Niger Delta, which itself failed to address the root causes of underdevelopment, all other initiatives have not engendered development and lasting peace in the oil-rich Niger Delta region. These initiatives and Commissions were simply tokenism as they failed to fundamentally, reposition the region on the path of sustainable growth and development. However, in generating data for this research, both primary and secondary data were used for analysis. The primary data were obtained from questionnaires, interviews and focus group discussions carried out in Bayelsa and River states. The study concluded that peace and development is possible in the Niger Delta if conscious and deliberate efforts are made by the government and international oil companies to improve the lots of the people who bear the devastating consequences of oil production in Nigeria.
06 14 2021 24 41 10.9734/arjass/2021/v14i330239 https://journalarjass.com/index.php/ARJASS/article/view/307 https://www.journalarjass.com/index.php/ARJASS/article/download/30239/56727 https://www.journalarjass.com/index.php/ARJASS/article/download/30239/56727 https://www.journalarjass.com/index.php/ARJASS/article/download/30239/56728
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Article Archives > Social Sciences and Humanities |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email support@articlearchives.org |
Date Deposited: | 18 Jan 2023 12:15 |
Last Modified: | 05 Jun 2024 09:49 |
URI: | http://archive.paparesearch.co.in/id/eprint/84 |