Cross River Governor, Ben Ayade has described as critical, the need
to address the restiveness that has characterized the Niger Delta region
as a panacea for development.
Ayade stated this when he received the Irish Ambassador to Nigeria,
Ambassador Sean Hoy and his team during a courtesy visit to his office
Calabar where he said the crisis and challenges of the Niger Delta is
one that can make the hardest man shed tears.
The governor said that “it is a legal, moral, complex,
anthropological and sociological issue to resolve the complex issues
within the ambit of human nature.”
According to him, “the choice for a point of intervention remains
sacrosanct as no matter how much you have given to a man, liberty is
better than slavery”, adding that “the people of the area yearn for
redemption which comes from a philosophical change of attitude,
re-orientation and restructuring of issues to ensure equity and fair
play.”
Continuing, Ayade queried “How would you stay in perpetual darkness,
with all your waterways spilled with oil, no source of livelihood,
living in a hut, defecating on to the river that you use as your
drinking water, and just a mile away, somebody is lighting the sky?.
“Yet as all these happens, malaria and all preventable diseases will
not let them stay, a child that grows up in such circumstance must
become restive by nature.”
However, Ayade commended the team for choosing Calabar for a
development center and the partnership with savannah center, reasoning
that, the latter understands the psychology, nature of the people and
the African man.
Earlier, Ambassador Hoy disclosed they were in Calabar after visiting
Bayelsa and River states to meet directly with the communities to
develop a framework of development involving the state and federal
governments in a bid to find a way forward.
“What I saw in those communities were disappointment in development
process as I saw communities sit in the dark while some miles away, I
saw light in the sky.
“We are here to support them, look at how the development of Niger
Delta can be done better than (what has been done) so far”, adding that,
“resources are not actually the problem, but how to prioritise issues
of development for the impact on the people is where the missing link is
and where government needs to come in.”
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