UYO — No fewer than six persons have been killed, while some villages
in Effiat, namely: Inua Abasi, Mbe Ndoro, Ibuot Uton, Utan Brama, and
Utan Effiong in Mbo Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State, were
sacked by irate youths.
The youths set homes on fire during a
protest over lack of basic amenities and non-payment of compensation by
the oil companies operating in the areas.
It was gathered that the crisis started last week but escalated yesterday.
Thousands of the fleeing villagers are currently taking refuge at Ibaka beach with household items rescued from the inferno.
The
rampaging youths also accused two prominent sons of the area of
depriving them of their entitlements and diverting to their private
pockets, monies paid by the oil companies for the development of the
communities.
Speaking with Vanguard on phone, one of the
youth leaders of Mbo Youth Forum, who declined to give his name, said
that they were disappointed by the greed of their prominent brothers,
who have turned round to betray the communities.
He said: “Six
people died as a result of this denial and deprivation only last week,
and no one knows how many lives would have been lost today (yesterday).
“We
had written to the Presidency, the state government, the police and the
other security formations of the gross misconduct of those two
individuals, but there has been no response.
“We fought with the
oil companies and they agreed to be paying compensation, which they have
not been paying to us as host communities, but the two persons
involved connived with the companies and collect a monthly compensation
of over N32 million, which they continue to share.”
The youths
alleged that a gubernatorial aspirant, who is running a community
surveillance contract with the oil companies and a certain chief in the
area, colluded to deprive the communities of their due.
Trouble,
it was learnt, started when two surveillance boats belonging to the two
prominent sons working for the oil companies were seized by the youths,
after efforts to get the two to release the monies as agreed failed.
Mr. Etim Etim Etisong, a victim, who narrated his ordeal to Vanguard, said: “I have lost my medicine and provision shop and my 15 rooms bungalow apartment. How and where do I start from?”
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