Saturday, July 18, 2015

No amount of dollars can pacify us over loss of Bakassi – Gov Ayade

No amount of dollars can pacify us over loss of Bakassi – Gov Ayade



Cross River State Governor, Senator Ben Ayade, yesterday chided the United Nations and Federal Government for ceding the oil-rich Bakassi Peninsular to the Republic of Cameroon without seeking the consent of the people through a plebiscite. Ayade, who stated this while receiving the country’s representative of United Nations High Commission for Refugees, Mrs. Angele Dikongue Atangana, in his office in Calabar, said the people of the state were still angry over the ceding of the peninsular.
He said the ceding of the peninsular was done without a plebiscite, thus unjustly depriving the people of their ancestral home and turning them into refugees in their own land. The governor, almost in an emotional fit, said: “Your Commission is undertaking a worthy and noble cause.
I thank you for your humanitarian assistance and expression of emotion, but the people are angry in the way and manner they have been treated. They have been deprived of their heritage and livelihood.” According to the governor, “The people of Bakassi were not given the opportunity to choose where they would want to belong and I am telling the United Nations that this is an unsettled issue and no amount of dollars can settle the issue. The people have now been split between Cross River and Akwa Ibom states as well as Nigeria and Cameroon.
As the agony of the people continues, their plight cannot be wiped away by dollars. “Take it that the people feel very disturbed and unhappy and if this had happened in any other part of the world, there would have been war today. This is totally unacceptable and is not done in the modern society.
Today, Cross River is traversed by internally displaced persons, who are refugees in their own state,” he said. Continuing, the governor said: “The displaced people of Bakassi are suffering and if United Nations had anything in mind, it should have started from there and if anything needed to be treated as an emergency, it is the Bakassi issue because the people live in such sub-human condition. The state will work hard to strengthen things and we will partner the commission to achieve its aims.”
Earlier, Atangana had commended the state government for accommodating refugees from Cameroon and said the commission was touched by the plight of the displaced persons of Bakassi. She said while everything was being done to ensure the resettling of the Cameroonians in their country of origin, the commission would collaborate with the state to make life comfortable for the people of Bakassi who were internally displaced in the state.
Atangana explained that the commission spent about $200,000 in the first half of 2013, and that it had worked out modalities to introduce vocational training for the people with the assistance of development partners as a means of giving them a sense of livelihood. She said they should not be seen as stateless people but be recognised as citizens or nationals of Nigeria who were rightly settled in their motherland.

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