Press Release
OGBOLUBIRI INTEGRITY GROUP.
(A REJOINDER)
RE: THE PLANNED MILITARY INTIMIDATION OF ALAPALA SUPPORTERS.

OGBOLUBIRI INTEGRITY GROUP.
(A REJOINDER)
RE: THE PLANNED MILITARY INTIMIDATION OF ALAPALA SUPPORTERS.
The recent publication by the All Progressives Congress (APC) signed by Comrade Moni Seikemengha, Chairman APC Burutu LGA, and Engr. Beke P. Black, Secretary, APC Burutu LGA, accusing the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) of planning military intimidation of Alapala supporters in the February rerun election is not only false but a deliberate attempt to mislead the public. The claims made in their publication are not only baseless but also serve as an irresponsible act of spreading misinformation that has the potential to incite unwarranted tension in the political landscape.
It is imperative to correct the record and provide an accurate portrayal of the events leading up to the rerun election to ensure that the public is well-informed and equipped to discern fact from fiction.
First and foremost, the assertion that the PDP has engaged in any act of intimidating voters is unequivocally false. Throughout its history, the PDP has maintained a firm commitment to upholding the principles of free, fair, and transparent electoral processes. This dedication to democratic values is not only recognized within Delta State but resonates throughout Nigeria as a whole. Any insinuation suggesting otherwise is not only misleading but also undermines the fundamental democratic rights of the populace.
Furthermore, the allegation that His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Elder Sheriff Oborevwori, plan to instruct or direct military personnel to intimidate voters in the February 3 rerun is patently untrue. Such malicious claims lack any substantiated evidence and a disservice to the reputation and integrity of an esteemed public figure. It is crucial to note that His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Elder Sheriff Oborevwori has consistently upheld ethical standards in his leadership and governance, and there is no basis for the unfounded accusations leveled against him.
The endless liers of the APC in their publication also alleged that Governor Sheriff Oborevwori is not comfortable with Hon. Guwor Emomotimi’s speakership of the Delta State House of Assembly because his emergence was out of necessity and that Hon. Michael Diden is mounting pressure on him to replace Rt. Hon. Guwor with Hon. Asupa Forteta as the speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly. These are calculated allegations for them to Nicodemously, perfect their plans to ferment trouble and perpetrate chaos, anarchy and crises during the election. Because they, the APC knows fully well that the Governor who is the chief security officer of the state will not allow anybody in disguise of election to cause breakdown of law and order in the state.
In fact, Rt Hon. Guwor Emomotimi and Hon. Asupa Forteta are close political associates who worked together for the emergence of Gov. Sheriff Oborevwori to become the governor of Delta State. So it is ridiculous for one to allege and infer that Gov. Sheriff Oborevwori is not comfortable with Rt. Hon. Guwor Emomotimi Speakership.
The claim that boys are being recruited by the PDP to cause a bloodbath if the election doesn’t go their way is baseless. In fact, it is the APC that is known for such tactics, as they have been reported to use private security outfits for such purposes. It is important to critically evaluate such allegations and consider the political motivations behind them.
Again, they claim that the four units scheduled for the re-run election are strongholds of Hon. Alapala Anthony Ebitonmo, this is also a baseless fabrication. In truth, these units are supporters of Hon. Asupa Forteta hence the unimaginable manipulation of votes by the APC that results to cancellation of those units. It is imperative to separate fact from fiction and reject attempts to distort the truth in the political landscape.
In stark contrast to the allegations put forth by the APC, it is essential to highlight the documented instances where the APC has been associated with using private security outfits to intimidate voters in riverine areas during the 2023 elections to do their bid. These well-documented accounts stand as a testament to the hypocritical nature of the aforementioned publication and raise questions about the credibility of the source behind this misinformation. It is imperative that we do not allow such baseless accusations to go unchallenged and unexamined.
As responsible citizens and members of the public, it is paramount to disregard the false and baseless publication from the APC. The dissemination of unfounded allegations does not only undermines the legitimacy of democratic processes but also serves to erode public trust in our electoral system.
In conclusion, the false publication from the APC regarding the planned military intimidation of Alapala supporters in the rerun election is a distortion of reality and an unfortunate attempt to manipulate public opinion. The PDP remains steadfast in its commitment to upholding the principles of democracy, and any insinuations to the contrary should be met with skepticism and scrutiny. It is essential to foster an environment where truth and accountability prevail, and we must collectively reject the propagation of misleading narratives that threaten the fabric of our democratic society.
Let us affirm our collective commitment to transparency, fairness, and the rule of law as we endeavor to uphold the sanctity of our electoral processes. The public deserves accurate and truthful information, and it is our collective responsibility to ensure that misinformation does not overshadow the pursuit of a just and equitable society.
Let us remind ourselves that the Delta State APC faithfuls are superlative in propaganda attempting to distort the natural course of events. For instance, the Supreme Court is yet to decide on the Delta State governorship election, but they have preempted its judgement accusing it of miscarriage of justice.
The February rerun election should be a testament to the resilience of our democratic values, and we must remain vigilant in guarding against attempts to subvert the democratic process. Together, let us stand firm in rejecting false narratives and upholding the integrity of our electoral system for the betterment of Delta State and Nigeria as a whole.
SIGN
Hon.Benson Clark
Chairman, Ogbolubiri Integrity Group (OIG)
Press Release
FULL TEXT OF PRESS STATEMENT BY THE IJAW NATIONAL CONGRESS (INC) ON THE RECENT PRESIDENTIAL PARDONS

PRESS STATEMENT BY THE IJAW NATIONAL CONGRESS (INC) ON THE RECENT PRESIDENTIAL PARDONS: A SYMBOLIC GESTURE IGNORING FUNDAMENTAL INJUSTICES
October 13, 2025 | Yenagoa, Bayelsa State
The Ijaw National Congress (INC), the apex socio-cultural organization of the Ijaw nation worldwide, has observed the recent exercise of the prerogative of mercy by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, which granted pardons to 175 Nigerians.
While we respectfully acknowledge the constitutional right of the President to wield this power, and recognize the symbolic value in correcting certain historical wrongs, the INC views this action with profound skepticism. We are not oblivious of the serious moral issues and questions raised by other critical stakeholders within and outside the country, but feel more bothered by the fact that this gesture, though wide-ranging, does little to address the deep-seated, systemic, and ongoing injustices perpetrated against the Ijaw people and the wider Niger Delta region.
Our position is informed by the following critical considerations:
1. The Pardon of the Ogoni Nine: A Welcome but Incomplete Act. The posthumous pardon granted to Ken Saro-Wiwa and the eight other Ogoni leaders is a long-overdue acknowledgement of the grave judicial murder committed by the Nigerian state in 1995. However, this symbolic act remains tragically disconnected from the living realities in Ogoniland and the entire Niger Delta. The environmental devastation, economic marginalization, and political repression that Ken Saro-Wiwa died fighting against continue unabated today. Pardoning the dead without healing the land and empowering the living is a hollow victory.
2. A Distraction from Core Issues of Resource Justice: The Ijaw nation remains the primary source of the oil and gas wealth that sustains Nigeria. Yet, we remain in the perpetual periphery of benefit, suffering from what can only be described as “economic asphyxiation”. The legal architecture of dispossession, from the Petroleum Decree of 1969 to the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) of 2021, remains firmly in place, systematically expropriating our resources and severing our sovereignty. A presidential pardon that does not restore our dignity and right to control and manage our God-given resources is no use to us.
3. The Unaddressed Ecological Genocide. While the President offers pardons, the Ijaw homeland continues to endure an ecological collapse orchestrated by decades of oil exploration. With thousands of recorded oil spills and continuous gas flaring that poisons our air and water, our ecosystem—the bedrock of our livelihood and cultural heritage—is being systematically destroyed. We do not need paternalistic gestures of mercy; we demand environmental justice, ecological restoration, and accountability from multinational corporations and the Nigerian state.
Our Demands:
The Ijaw National Congress, therefore, reiterates that our struggle is not for symbolic pardons but for substantive justice. We call on the Federal Government of Nigeria and the international community to:
– Initiate a genuine process of resource control and fiscal federalism that allows the Ijaw people to own and manage their resources as a right enshrined in natural justice and international law.
– Enforce a comprehensive and urgent environmental remediation program in the Niger Delta, in line with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Report on Ogoniland and beyond.
– Repeal obnoxious laws like the Land Use Act and review constitutional provisions that perpetuate internal colonialism and “legalized oppression”.
– Address the disparity between the governance of the oil and gas sector, as contained in PIA 2021 and the solid minerals governance by the Nigerian Minerals and Mining Act, 2007. This discrimination is designed to militarise, plunder and marginalise the Niger Delta, while affording a more equitable regime for solid mineral resources.
– Address the historical and political grievances of the Ijaw people, including the brazen political assaults on Ijaw sons and daughters, as witnessed in the recent illegal impeachment attempts against Governor Siminalayi Fubara of Rivers State.
Conclusion:
The Ijaw nation can no longer be placated by tokenistic gestures. Our right to self-determination is inalienable and rooted in solemn treaties with the British Crown and validated by international law. We shall continue to pursue this cause through peaceful, diplomatic, and strategic means, with the full solidarity of the global community.
The INC remains resolute in its mission to champion the dignity, justice, and sovereignty of the Ijaw people. We will not relent until our people are free from the shackles of oppression and can truly determine their own political and economic destiny.
Long Live the Ijaw Nation!
Prof. Benjamin O. OkabaPresident,
Ijaw National Congress (INC) Global
Press Release
PRESS RELEASE: The PIA and Solid Minerals Act – The Legislative Disparity and Discrimination Against the Niger Delta People

Being a Press Briefing by Prof Benjamin Okaba President, Ijaw National Congress (INC) Global on September 6, 2025, at the International Wing of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos, Nigeria, on Arrival from A 4-Day Working Visit to the Republic of Ghana.
The Ijaw National Congress (INC), the apex socio-cultural body of the Ijaw Nation, under my leadership as President, is compelled to address the Nigerian public and the international community on the grave and systematic injustices codified into law against the people of the Niger Delta. Our focus is the stark and discriminatory disparity between the governance of the oil and gas sector, as contained in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021, and the solid minerals sector, governed by the Nigerian Minerals and Mining Act 2007.
A comparative analysis reveals not a simple difference in administrative approach, but a deliberate and calculated legislative framework designed to militarize, plunder, and marginalize the Niger Delta while affording other regions a gentler, more equitable regime for their resources. This is a classic case of two Nigerias operating under two sets of rules.
1. The Fundamental Inequity in Community Benefits and Ownership
The most egregious disparity lies in the treatment of host communities.
· The Niger Delta Experience (PIA): The PIA offers a paltry 3% of annual operational expenditure from oil companies for host communities, a figure we rejected as insulting given the decades of monumental environmental devastation and socio-economic neglect. Furthermore, this contribution is not from profit but from operational cost, and it is mandated to be managed through a Trust Fund, effectively sidelining elected state governments and traditional institutions, reducing them to “siddon lookers” in the words of Bayelsa State’s Deputy Governor. Crucially, the Act imposes a collective punishment clause, holding entire communities financially liable for vandalism of oil assets, a provision that is unjust, unconstitutional, and inflammatory.
· The Solid Minerals Regime: In stark contrast, the Mining Act mandates that operators conclude a Community Development Agreement (CDA) with their hosts, addressing scholarships, employment, infrastructure, and enterprise development. There is no collective punishment clause. Most tellingly, while the PIA reinforces the total federal ownership of oil, the Mining Act, though also declaring federal ownership, has historically tolerated artisanal and small-scale mining by individuals and cooperatives across northern and western states, allowing them to benefit directly from their resources without military intervention . This operational laxity grants a de facto economic participation that is ruthlessly denied to the people of the Niger Delta.
2. The Environmental and Remediation Double Standard
The approach to environmental protection and remediation further highlights the bias.
· In the Niger Delta: Despite the PIA’s provisions against gas flaring, it includes a dangerous loophole allowing the Minister to permit it, rendering the prohibition weak. The environmental degradation from decades of oil spills and gas flaring has been catastrophic, destroying livelihoods and poisoning our ecosystem. Yet, there has never been a comprehensive environmental clean-up funded by the federal government or operators, with the much-publicized Ogoni cleanup being haphazard at best.
· In the Solid Minerals Sector: The Mining Act explicitly requires license holders to minimize environmental impact and rehabilitate mined land to its natural or predetermined state . While enforcement is a challenge, the legal obligation is clear and unequivocal, lacking the ministerial loopholes present in the PIA.
3. Security and Militarization: An Occupied Territory vs. Business as Usual
This is the most chilling aspect of the disparity.
*The Niger Delta: Our region is effectively under military occupation. The government has deployed the Joint Task Force (JTF) Operation Restore Hope since 2002 to secure oil infrastructure and prevent local refining. This militarization turns our communities into war zones, with our people subjected to human rights abuses, all to protect oil assets while denying us the benefits from them.
*The Solid Minerals Sector: There is no JTF in mining states. Despite widespread illegal mining, the federal government only announced plans for mining marshals as recently as March 2024, and even that has not been fully activated. This represents a deliberate non-militarization of the solid minerals sector, allowing for a more permissive environment that stands in stark contrast to the repression in the Niger Delta.
4. The Grand Larceny of Resource Allocation: 3% vs. 30%
The PIA commits the ultimate act of resource injustice by allocating a meager 3% of OPEX to host communities who bear 100% of the burden, while allocating a whopping 30% of NNPC Ltd.’s profit to explore for oil in so-called “frontier basins”. These basins are predominantly located in the North. This means that the wealth generated from the Niger Delta’s suffering is being used to subsidize the search for oil in other regions, with no guarantee of success. This is not national development; it is state-sponsored resource colonialism.
Table: Summary of Legislative Disparacies Against the Niger Delta
POLICY AREA
1. Niger Delta (Petroleum Industry Act)
2. Solid Minerals Region (Mining Act)
3. Implied Status of the Niger Delta
HOST COMMUNITY BENEFITS
1. 3% of Operetor’s Annual OPEX (Operational Expenditure)
2. Community Development Agreements (CDA)
3. A cost center to be managed
ENVIRONMENTAL REMEDIATION
1. Weak penalties, ministerial loopholes, no comprehensive cleanup
2. Clear legal obligation for rehabilitation
3. A sacrifice zone
SECURITY APPROACH
1. Militarize (Joint Task Force)
2. Non-militarized (Planned Marshals)
3. An occupied territory
RESOURCE CONTROL
1. Absolute federal control, no local participation
2. De facto tolerance of local mining
3. A conquered territory
REVENUE ALLOCATION
1. Wealth diverted to Frontier Basin (30%)
2. Benefits Largely retained within region
3. A colony to be exploited
Conclusion and Demand
The evidence is irrefutable. The PIA and the Mining Act, when read side-by-side, reveal a Nigeria that operates a two-tiered system of resource justice. For the rest of Nigeria, there is a pretension of cooperation and benefit-sharing. For the Niger Delta, there is only extraction, militarization, and legislative neglect.
We, therefore, demand the following:
1. Immediate Legislative Harmonization: The National Assembly must initiate an amendment to the PIA to bring its community benefit provisions, environmental obligations, and ownership principles in line with the more equitable standards of the Nigerian Minerals and Mining Act. This includes, as a minimum, a review of the 3% and 30% allocations.
2. Demilitarization of the Niger Delta: The Federal Government must immediately withdraw the Joint Task Force from the Niger Delta and adopt a civil and regulated security approach, consistent with the approach in the solid minerals sectors.
3. True Federalism and Resource Control: The long-term solution to this perennial crisis is a return to the practice of true federalism and derivation-based resource control, as practiced in the First Republic, where regions managed their resources for their development.
The Niger Delta is not a colony of Nigeria. We can no longer accept laws that treat our people and our environment as sacrificial lambs for national unity. Enough is enough.
Signed:
Professor Benjamin Okaba
President, Ijaw National Congress (INC) Global
Press Release
Press Statement: Ijaw National Congress (INC) Condmn Gov. Oborevwori’s Delay In Ayakoromor Bridge Completion In The Face Of Multiple Capital Projects Elsewhere

August 23, 2025
The Ijaw National Congress (INC), under my leadership, has taken note of the recent statement by his Excellency, Rt.Hon Sheriff Oborevwori, Governor of Delta State, announcing the award of reconstruction of the dual carriageway with reinforced concrete from the Spare Parts Market U-TURN, Effurun, to after Ohore Junction, before Omenta Bridge, to CCECC.
The INC commends the governor for his bold and visionary infrastructure strides, particularly the rapid execution of large-scale projects across Urhobo land, including dual carriageway, flyovers, and storm water drain networks. These projects are not only laudable but also demonstrate the governor’s commitment to modernising critical transport corridors and easing mobility for citizens in those areas.
However, as a pan-ijaw body, we cannot overlook the perpetual neglect and abandonment of the Ayakoromor Bridge project and the long demand road linkage from Warri through Ogbe-ijoh to Odimodi and Ogulagha-a critical artery to the ijaw heartland and the nations economic nerve centre in oil and gas production. This deliberate sidelining of ijaw communities, despite their overwhelming contribution to Nigeria’s energy wealth, is unacceptable and smacks of systemic marginalisation.
It is both disheartening and provocative that while billions of naira of our common partrimony are being channeled into infrastructural upgrade across Urhobo territories, projects of equal, if not greater national significance sited in Ijaw areas are left to rot.
The Ayakoromor bridge, in particular, has become a symbol of broken promises and political insensitivity – a project flagged off with much funfair in 2014 is now left to rot in abandonment, cutting off riverine Ijaw communities from meaningful economic integration of Delta State.
We, therefore, call on Governor Oborevwori to rise above partican or ethnic considerations and urgently prioritise the completion of Ayakoromor bridge and continue to extend roads connecting Warri to the riverine areas, either constructing Ayakoromor-Gbekebor-Obotebe-Burutu-Ofougbene-Forcados-Odimodi-Ogulagha route or the Ogbe-Ijoh-Isaba-Ayakoromor/Gbekebor-Obotebe-Burutu-Ofougbene-Forcados-Odimodi-Ogulagha route. These projects are not mere demands of a people; they are essential Lifelines that will unlock commerce, facilitate energy logistics, and address decades of infrastructural injustice in Delta state.
The INC is not against the development of any part of Delta State. On the contrary, we applaud progress wherever it is recorded. But equity, fairness, and justice demand that Ijaw communities – who bear the environmental brunt of oil exploitation, pollution, and hosts key national economic assets such as the Forcados and Escravos Oil Terminals which contributes collossally to Delta’s towering federal allocation must not continue to be treated as people under apparthide rule or second-class citizens in capital developmental planning. Inter-Community and internal community roads are very good, but they take our people nowhere.
Governor Oborevwori, the INC implores you to remember your oath to govern all parts of Delta State equitably and your repeated promises to complete Ayakoromor bridge. Only then can your vision of rebuilding a “Stronger Delta together” be truly inclusive and enduring.
Signed:
Prof. Benjamin Ogele Okaba
President, Ijaw National Congress (global).