The National Advocacy Centre of Social Action has observed that the recent refusal by President Muhammadu Buhari to assent to the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), was a right step in the right direction.
Its Head and Director of Programmes, Ms Vivian Bellonwu-Okafor made this assertion while reacting to the rejection of the bill by President Buhari.
According to her, teeming Civil Society Organizations and Community Groups including Social Action, had earlier raised alarm on the gaping holes and major shortcomings in the bill as well as the potential danger these held for the environment, the lives and livelihoods of Oil – bearing (host) communities’ residents as well as the Industry itself.
“As we speak presently, the entire atmosphere of a State in the Niger Delta, Rivers State, is enveloped in a black deadly soot, masking every object or item in that place and stealthily decimating the lives of the millions of people living there. Experts have attributed this to combustion of fossil fuel and petroleum. It is therefore appalling that the National Assembly, against all well-meaning pleas to bring back the comprehensive Petroleum Industry Bill and jettison the piece-meal PIGB, which did not even make any pretense to care about or recognize the lives cum rights of host communities or the the environment. At best, it simply authored confusion and double-standards in establishing petroleum regulatory institutions for the Industry; went ahead and passed it,” she stated.
Bellonwu-Okafor pointed out that Social Action had lauded the President for his foresightedness in taking step to forestall what would have been a major setback to both the people and the environment of the oil-bearing region.
She added that any bill for the industry must recognize the environment and lives/rights of the host area(s) as fundamental and therefore legislate on it firstly before commercial entities and interests.
The Advocacy chief therefore called on the National Assembly to do what she said was “the needful and rightful”, by bringing back and passing the comprehensive PIB in the interest of equity, justice and the environment.