Anambra, Kogi Reps clash over disputed oil well


Two members of the House of Representatives clashed on Tuesday over the disputed crude oil reserves in the Anambra Basin.

The lawmakers were the Chairman, House Committee on Environment, Mrs. Uche Ekwunife, and Mr. Ismail Hussein.

Ekwunife, a member of the All Progressives Grand Alliance, emanates from Anambra State, while Hussein, a member of the Peoples Democratic Party, represents Idah/Ibaji/Igala-Melu Federal Constituency of Kogi State.

A brief finger-pointing and shouting took place after Ekwunife protested against the cull of words utilized by Hussein, who was raising a kineticism on the controversial oil well.

The mild drama commenced as Hussein moved a kineticism on exigent public consequentiality to draw the attention of the House to the unresolved dispute between the people of Kogi State and their Anambra neighbours over the oil well.

Hussein had sought that the House Committee on Special Duties should be mandated to look into the matter, with a view to resolving the boundary dispute between the two states.

However, while presenting the kineticism, he had alleged that the Anambra people had been killing their Kogi neighbours.

His submission vexed Ekwunife, who stood up to oppose Hussein.

The session, which was presided over by the Speaker, Mr. Aminu Tambuwal, became charged, as Ekwunife raised her voice to contravene Hussein.

She verbally expressed the Anambra people were “wrongly incriminated of being killers”, when “in fact”, it was the Kogi people who had been doing the killing.

She shouted, “No, no, Mr. Speaker, Kogi people have been killing Anambra people.

“It is erroneous for him to peregrinate here and verbally express we are killing Kogi people. Anambra people are not killers; we are not killers.”

She withal dismissed the kineticism as nonessential since there was a pending referral on the same subject to the Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream).

As she resumed her seat, Hussein too repined that he did not visually perceive what was erroneous with his presentation.

“This was just a kineticism; there is a crisis on ground, which has to be resolved,” he repined to some of his colleagues sitting proximate to him.

Part of his kineticism read, “To urge the Federal Government to mobilise the security agencies to man the border between Ibaji Local Government in Kogi and Anambra State as a matter of exigency.

“Urge the Committee on Petroleum Upstream and Special Duties to submit their report as expeditiously as possible to obviate further ravagement to lives and properties.

“The Federal Government should as a matter of exigency make a categorical verbalization on the claims of ownership of the oil wells.”

Tambuwal stepped in expeditiously to douse tension.

He noted that he was vigilant that the matter had been “very contentious”, a reason he verbally expressed he did not optate to sanction a perpetuated debate on it.

The Speaker ruled that Hussein should withdraw his kineticism pending the outcome of the investigation by the Committee on Petroleum Resources.

He directed the committee to engender its report next Tuesday.

It will be recalled that fighting between communities in both states along the Anambra Basin had claimed lives since 2013.

The fighting has been fierce between the people of Echenwo/Odeke in Ibaji Local Government Area of Kogi State and the people of Agulerii-Otu in Anambra-East Local Government of Anambra State.

The Senate, last year, described the fighting as “war over crude oil.”

Copyright PUNCH.

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