BP Oil Spill: Who Wears the Shoes Knows Where They Hurt

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  • 8/9/2019 BP Oil Spill: Who Wears the Shoes Knows Where They Hurt

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    BP Oil Spill: Who Wears the Shoes Knows Where They Hurt

    The Ogoni Children Cultural and Fundamental Rights Council (OCAFAC) extend its solidarity to the people of the Gulf of

    Mexico for the degradation they face. We're appalled by the yet to be quantified damages and losses caused by British

    Petroleum's (BP) avoidable and reckless oil spill.

    OCAFAC can feel the pains and loses since Ogoni had suffered and still suffering environmental degradation. It's a

    problem caused by BP's sister company $hell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC). Not only has Ogoni

    felt these pains and loses, its people have been killed for standing up to protest $hell's negative actions or impact on the

    society and environment.

    On like America, in Nigeria, when oil spills are reported $hell and others claims they're caused by sabotage. Whereas

    outdated equipments and corroded pipelines have been primarily responsible. These companies keep claiming militants,

    etc. sabotaged their pipes, but forgot that oil mining started in the region in 1956-while militancy came between 2004,

    2006 and up to 2009. Currently, pockets of militant groups are still available.

    Militancy came after Ken Saro-Wiwa and 8 others were killed by $hell and the government of Nigeria for campaigning

    against their methods of operations and stopping the flow of oil. Remember, it's BP that started mining in Nigeria (1956)

    and metamorphosed into $hell Petroleum Development Corporation and later SPDC. They therefore have the same

    deadly tract records. These records are such that profit, recklessness is preferred over environmental safety and the

    health cum good of the host communities.

    Interestingly, the same recklessness, which pushed Saro-Wiwa to action, that he formed the Movement for the Survival

    of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) in 1990, has impacted America. The Gulf is, however, fortunate because the media and

    Obama's administration have channeled their energies on BP. This media concentration and service is what is

    deliberately ignored when similar spills occur in Ogoni/Niger delta of Nigeria. Americans, except some activists and fewpeople of good conscience also downplay the Nigeria's predicaments. And, the reason is that they're the most

    beneficiaries of the oil from this region. As it stands in the Gulf, America may learn the same lessons and the reasons

    Saro-Wiwa led his people against $hell. This is because who wears the shoes knows where they hurt.

    Meanwhile, American media have for decades knowingly and deliberately ignored life threatening situations of oil spills,

    gas flaring and other double standards applied by foreign oil companies in Nigeria and Africa in general. They do this in

    the same vein and intent as inequitable reporting, which misinforms the American public and stereotype, stigmatize

    Africans. And the intent is to protect, promote and project these oil killer companies as lords and saviors to the black

    world whereas they are polluters. In short, the media have poisoned the minds of most African-Americans about their

    ancestral home with negative portraits.

    The irony is, when similar spills and degradation occur in Texas, Alaska, etc. and the alarming disaster in the Gulf, the

    media no doubt makes the call. Not only have they covered the spills on minute basis, they've also demanded the truth

    of BP. Citizen's activism and the activist president of the United States of America have been catalytic in making BP work

    harder to try to contain the spill and also set aside $20 billion in four years for claims caused by its misguided damages.

    And when the dust settles the escrow money might even be more than what has been agreed. The media and

    government are prepared to hold BP accountable. In Nigeria, 50 years old spills are yet to be clean. Little or nothing of

    adequate compensation is paid, but threats, repression and extrajudicial killings.

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    What the media, Obama and American citizens have done in the Gulf is what I recommend for the world, the Nigerian

    government and people in particular, when the next spills that will occur soon in Ogoni/Niger delta emerge. The

    Nigerian media is handicapped and most of them could be easily bribed like government officials/politicians. Therefore,

    Western media (America's in particular) should wade in for the sake of our common humanity when such spill comes.

    Ogoni/Niger delta people, especially children have suffered untold hardships. These results from the incessant spills,

    excessive gas flares and gross human rights violations committed against parents and some children. The peasants havebeen oppressed for nonviolently protesting environmental racism and economic strangulation by $hell, Chevron,

    ExxonMobil, Agip, and numerous others. Of course, the Nigerian government which runs a joint venture with these oil

    majors laid the foundation for its citizens to be disrespected, abuse and killed by soldiers paid by these companies. The

    government is indeed the first culprit of these crimes against the weak and disadvantaged of Niger delta.

    Saro-Wiwa led the Ogoni people on a protest march against $hell Oil in 1993. He exposed a spill that took place in Ebubu

    Eleme (Ogoni) in 1970 and is yet to be cleaned. The fact that $hell and other companies haven't conducted

    Environmental Assessment, Social and Health

    Impact Studies, since crude oil was discovered in 1956 at Oloibri, was also exposed. Gas flares of deadly proportions andthe reckless laying of high pressured pipelines at close proximity of human habitation were revealed to the world.

    Ogonis/Niger delta gained and kept this consciousness to the disappointment of $hell, Nigerian government and

    conspirators such as American and British governments. The result was the aforementioned murder by hanging of Saro-

    Wiwa and 8 other Ogoni rights activists on Nov. 10, 1995.

    Former President Bill Clinton had the opportunity to save these innocent men. But because America buys more than 40

    percent of oil stolen by the Nigerian government from the defenseless Ogonis and Niger deltans, they're allowed to die.

    American and other Western oil companies were protected. Clinton was lobbied to impose economic sanctions on the

    military government of Nigeria to halt the hanging he refused. Rather, a so-called "diplomatic sanction" was enforced.

    This weak sanction allowed America to continue the purchase of cheap and best grade oil from Nigeria. Insofar as oilcontinues to run from the veins of Niger deltans to the pumps in America Niger deltans can die-who cares! Oil has

    become ticker than blood; what a lesson!

    Finally, the sad experiences of Ogoni and the careless and capitalistic attitude of the American government which also

    supply arms to Nigeria and train its military, brought about militancy in Nigeria. These militant groups had fought and

    still fighting for environmental and economic justice alongside nonviolent groups. The oil-rich region of Nigeria needs

    justice, development and peace. They seek to be self-determined like the federating states in America and so forth. That

    is control their economic resources and environment in alliance with the central government. America and the larger

    world should therefore be compassionate by resisting the sponsorship of mass killings (via investments in oil) resulting

    from oil struggles.

    If any conscience still exists, America should focus on extracting more oil from its waters or shores to feel the same thing

    those in Nigeria are feeling. It could also invest in alternative sources of energy for the sake of the people in the Gulf and

    beyond. We know arriving at safe and alternative energy sources would take time. Yet, the Gulf experience is a wake up

    call. If something concrete is started now, and with the promises today's technology holds success will come swiftly and

    in full panoply.

    We must start now to reduce our foreign oil consumption and extract more in at home. This must nevertheless be done

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    carefully as environmental safety must never be compromised as allegedly done in BP's situation. What's good for the

    goose can't be bad for the gander. If America fears the attendant environmental catastrophes that come with the

    extraction of fossil fuel at home, it should know that Africans have right to such fears as well.

    What happened in the Gulf is more of a monthly if not weekly disaster in Nigeria. Neither the government nor oil

    companies cares. The government is in the pocket of the oil companies. The propensity that these companies will be

    held accountable as Obama is doing isn't

    there. What is happening in Nigeria is tsunaminous; and the people need help. $hell Oil flares more than 86 percent of

    its gas in Niger delta. It's spilled more than 40 percent of its oil in the region.

    The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has calculated that $hell Oil's gas flares in Nigeria are a major contributor to

    global warming. WWF is an international non-governmental organization for the conservation, research and restoration

    of the natural environment, formerly called the World Wildlife Fund, which remains its official name in the United States

    and Canada. And the UN Conference on Environment and Development also concluded that the Niger Delta, which is a

    home to coastal rainforest and mangrove, is the most endangered river in the world. This is courtesy reckless oil

    exploitation by foreign companies.

    Consequently, and putting side-by-side these degradation and death, and the role America plays in the Nigeria oil sector

    OCAFAC believes this nation has a moral responsibility to reduce or completely stop the genocide that is taking place in

    Nigeria. This should be in the same way it's working hard to protect and making life meaningful to the people of the Gulf

    of Mexico. And maybe the incident in the Gulf would change America's attitude toward Nigeria for better, because who

    wears the shoes knows where they hurt.