Ex-militants
on the platform of Leadership Forum for Peace in Niger Delta yesterday
threatened to return to the trenches if the federal government fails to pay
their allowance.
They have therefore issued a three-day ultimatum to the Federal
government to pay up their allowance or be prepared for another crisis in the
coastal region.
Leader of the group, Gen. Reuben Wilson alias Pastor spoke in
Yenagoa yesterday while addressing 100 ex-militant leaders, lamented that all
the agreements reached between the group and late President Umar Yar’ Adua had
not been implemented.
The ex-warlords, who were drawn from Edo, Imo, Cross River,
Rivers, Akwa- Ibom, Delta and Bayelsa States, noted that they could only appeal
to their followers to maintain peace till Wednesday, February 13 .
Wilson warned that the group would not be able to guarantee the
actions of their followers if the said allowance was not paid before the
ultimatum expired.
While absolving the Special Adviser to the President on Niger
Delta Affairs and co-ordinator of the Amnesty programme, Kingsley Kuku for the
nonpayment of the allowances , the ex-militant leaders blamed the delay on the
unpaid allowance on the National Assembly and the Presidency.
The ex-militant leader said their boys were frustrated over the
non-payment of their allowance ,as they have been issuing threat text mobile
phone messages to their various leaders. His words: “Our boys have not been
paid.
They are threatening us by sending different threat messages. If
the money is delayed beyond Wednesday there would be crisis because our boys
have become unruly and impatient.
We are giving the Federal Government up till Wednesday to pay
our money. If they don’t pay, we cannot guarantee. If the money is not paid,
anything that happens, they should not blame the leaders, because we cannot
talk to our boys beyond Wednesday”.
Adding his voice, an exmilitant leader from Rivers state,
Opunamah Andetufe, faulted the federal government for reneging on all the
agreements, the ex-militant leaders had with late President Yar Adua.
“The Federal Government wanted to take us for a ride. It appears
they want to toy with our patience and treat us as fools.
They prefer it that we should protest. Our grouse is not with
Kingsley Kuku, but, President Goodluck Jonathan and the National Assembly”,
Andetufe said.
Tags
Politics
The allowances they are collecting is for what service rendered? Is this country not ours collectively. So anybody can gather his people together to forment trouble and also ask d FG to be paying for them to sieze fire.
ReplyDeleteGod help this country
Nor mind them , if nor b mumu govt wey we get , who them bé to dey give ultimatum. Thief make dem dey there dey wait for money. Yeye dey smell
ReplyDeleteU guys are all fools.wat is allowance we all agreed on development not allowance Nija delta boys pls we did not figth for allowance but development ,
ReplyDeleteHhhhhmmm, I'm not indifferent when it comes to remuneration of ex-militants but I'm of the opinion that the allowance shouldn't be perpetual as I believe after rehabilitation they should be well catered for and given jobs or skilled for a particular trade. However, the threat posed by the group shows that the entire rehabilitation exercise is zero. Even though theirs is far better than the blood thirsty Boko's, I can't imagine a well rehab-man chanting songs of war. Please TAKE IT COOL and to the FG you better pay on schedule.
ReplyDeletePls we al shuld pray 4 d peace of dis great nation dis is no longer funny,issuing threat by d ex-militant,God fight 4 ur childrn.
ReplyDelete