The founder of the Odua People’s Congress, Dr. Fredrick
Fasehun, has asked the President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government to pay
him and his organisation the money owed them for the protection of oil
pipelines.
He explained that six companies were given the contract by
the Goodluck Jonathan administration to guard pipelines belonging to the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.
Fasehun said a total of 18,000 personnel were sent to the field out of which
4,000 were members of the OPC.
The OPC founder said his organisation was not given a penny
before the contract, adding that after Jonathan’s exit, the contract was
terminated and nothing was given to the OPC.
He said, “We were given the contract on March 15, 2015 and
we deployed youths into the jungle. They faced insects, snakes and other wild
animals and some of them even died. The government did not pay us a kobo before
or during the time of the contract which ended on June 15.
“We have asked our lawyers to study the terms of the
contract. An official in the NNPC told me that we had been paid but I told him
that we had not received a penny. We call the attention of the powers that be
to look into this. The holy books say that a worker deserves his wage.”
A few weeks to the March 28 presidential election, the then
National Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed, had questioned the rationale behind the contract which was awarded
two weeks before the elections.
Mohammed had alleged that Jonathan gave the OPC over N2bn
as mobilisation money for the election under the guise of pipeline protection.
However, Fasehun urged Mohammed, who is now the Minister of
Information and Culture, to withdraw the statement and correct the wrong
impression.
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