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Crude Spillage: Environmental group trains oil community residents on pollution  monitoring in Bayelsa -By Tife Owolabi

He called on Shell and other oil firms to always consider the needs of the rural people by providing them with a standard hospital because the people are dying from various ailments caused by oil exploration.

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Crude oil spillage in Bayelsa community

An advocacy and environmental rights group, Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), has trained no few than 60 residents of oil-bearing communities on pollution detection and prevention in Bayelsa state.

Speaking to the volunteers during training, in Ikarama Community, Yenagoa Local Government Area (LGA) Dr. Nnimmo Bassey, Executive Director of HOMEF said that a safe environment was fundamental to support lives and livelihoods.

It would be recalled that Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) started operations in Ikarama community, in 1964.

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He said that there was a need for people, who resided near oil and gas fields, to remain vigilant in conserving the environment.

Bassey advised that they should also ensure that the economic interests of investors did not threaten the environment.

He said there was the need to raise volunteers who would defend the ecosystem from degradation and pollution.

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The Executive Director said that Ikarama community is the worst hit and most impacted when it comes to an oil spill in the Niger Delta region.

According to him, available data indicate that the area records the most frequent oil spills from the operations of Shell and Agip.

He advised them to develop their skills and capacity to ‘listen to the environment as it responded and spoke by responding to human activities that distort the ecosystem.

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The session had a site inspection of the oil spill impacted site.

The volunteers found out that a youth leader from the community wanted to use his farm for fish farming and discovered that oil was oozing out from the ground.

“A community youth invested resources to excavate his farm for fish farm only to find out that oil was coming out from the ground.

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“He did this last year and this year, it is shocking that the exposure to this level of pollution has not driven the polluters to action immediately.

“We heard Shell has come here to take samples up till now, we have not heard that the result has been released. We want to be sure that the result should be released as soon as they are ready.

“The Ministry of Environment, the NOSDRA, and those from the Federal Ministry should be involved too.

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“We are having contamination not just in this location here, it is very important to test soil across the community because we are having oil facilities transversing Ikarama community and other Niger Delta communities,” Bassey said.

He recommended clean up of oil-impacted areas as the people have been affected badly in oil spill cases, in the Niger Delta region.

Also speaking, Mr. Alagoa Morris, an environmentalist, said that monitoring the environment demanded factual and evidence-based data collection, recording, and reporting.

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He called on Shell and other oil companies to be proactive when such happens for the safety of the rural dwellers, and the aquatic lives that the people depend on.

On his part, Mr. Benjamin Enebiri, the owner of the fish farm where oil was coming from the ground, expressed sadness over the situation, calling on Shell to remediate his land.

He said he invested over N600,000 to hire an excavator to dig the pond, regretting that all has become a waste of resources for him and his family.

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He called on Shell and other oil firms to always consider the needs of the rural people by providing them with a standard hospital because the people are dying from various ailments caused by oil exploration.

The interactive segment of the training had the volunteers from the community share experiences on the adverse impacts of oil and gas exploration on their environments.

Tife Owolabi
Journalist
Niger Delta
@tifeowolabi

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