Ex-militant leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo aka Tompolo, has described the allegation that he masterminded the abduction of 14 journalists in the creeks of Gbaramatu Kingdom, Delta State, as untrue and misleading. Tompolo, in a statement, said: “It has become necessary to make this clarification in the face of the deliberate distortion of facts by some mischief makers bent on denigrating my person and questioning my integrity before the larger society.
“More
so, I am persuaded by the fact of my experience as a crusader for equity,
fairness and justice the world over including the oppressed people of Gbaramatu
Kingdom in Warri South-West Local Government Area, who have always found
brotherliness and companionship in members of the fourth estate of the realm.
“In
the case of the Ijaw of the Niger Delta which I have championed over the years,
journalists have been worthy partners even as their contributions have served
as veritable means to ventilate our views, opinions and positions as a people
who have had cause to draw global attention to our plight.
“However,
in the matter of the hyped ‘abduction’ of journalists in Oporoza
last week, it is pertinent to state that they were victims of an orchestrated
and well-rehearsed saga by their Itsekiri clients, who lured them into a trap.
Suffice it to say that unknown to the journalists (some of whom are my friends)
and before their arrival in Warri, their Itsekiri hosts had concluded plans to
video-capture some Ijaw settlements, especially Ikpokpo community, to show to
the world as Itsekiri lands in their desperate attempt to distort historical
facts, especially as the hosting/siting of the Export Processing Zone, EPZ,
project poses some challenges.
“It
should be noted that the Gbaramatu people have been agitating for inclusion in
the EPZ project since 2012, as of right, that the part of the land earmarked
for the project starting from Ikpokpo community belongs to them.
“It
was on the strength of the above that in November 2013, the Gbaramatu people
were invited alongside other stakeholders, to the unveiling meeting of the
project at Government House Annex Warri by Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC, and the state government. At the said meeting, the Gbaramatu
people, out of curiosity, inquired why they have not been recognised as
stakeholders by way of acquisition of land from them. But to their surprise,
the governor shut them out of the project and merely identified them as
‘impacted community.’”
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