Senator Seriake Dickson, representing Bayelsa West in the National Assembly, has leveled damning accusations, alleging that prominent figures from Lagos and the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, are the brains behind the rampant oil theft plaguing the Niger Delta region.
Speaking as a guest on Inside Sources with Laolu Akande, a socio-political program broadcasted on Channels Television, Senator Dickson, a seasoned politician and former two-term governor of Bayelsa State, decried the pervasive nature of oil theft in the region. He highlighted the complicity of both the official system and oil companies in perpetuating this illicit activity, emphasizing the dire need for national values to curb the exploitation of the nation’s resources for personal gain.
“Why should a country like Nigeria, which has been a major oil producer and exporter for the past seven decades, lack a systematic way of monitoring its oil production and distribution?” questioned Dickson, stressing that the absence of such accountability measures has contributed to the proliferation of illegal activities, including arms trafficking, drug trade, and cultism, in the Niger Delta.
He explicitly implicated influential individuals from Abuja and Lagos as the orchestrators of this nefarious enterprise, asserting that the official security, oil, and federal systems are complicit in perpetuating the cycle of oil theft.
Dickson likened the situation to the global consensus against blood diamond trafficking and called for a unified stance by the international community to reject stolen crude oil from Nigeria.
In his call to action, Senator Dickson urged leaders at all levels to exhibit robust political will in addressing the scourge of oil theft, which he described as a “malignant cancer” plaguing the nation. He emphasized the imperative of dismantling the entrenched networks of corruption and ensuring transparency and accountability in the oil sector.
A Persistent Challenge:
Oil theft has remained a persistent challenge in Nigeria, with staggering volumes of crude oil being siphoned off by powerful vested interests within the oil sector. In 2022, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) Limited uncovered an illegal oil connection operating for nearly a decade, resulting in the loss of approximately 600,000 barrels per day.
Reports indicate that an estimated 108,000 barrels of crude oil are stolen daily in Nigeria, amounting to substantial financial losses for the country. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), of which Nigeria is a member, estimates that the country loses 2.3 million barrels monthly, translating to over $1 billion in revenue every three months.
While security agencies have made efforts to combat oil theft by arresting perpetrators and dismantling illegal operations, experts assert that the problem will persist until official complicity and bunkering are addressed, and transparency and accountability measures are enforced within the oil industry.