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Monday 22 June 2015

Nigerian Army, Navy Take Over NNPC Pipeline Protection, Unvailes "Operation Awase" To Tackel Vandals

Nigerian Army on Sunday has confirmed that it had taken over the security of the NNPC pipelines in the Lagos area, along with the Nigerian Navy, while it craved the maximum cooperation of host communities.


A statement by the Director, Army Public Relations, 81 Division of the Nigerian Army, Col. Mustapha Anka, disclosed this in an interview in Lagos with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).


He said the joint operation, code named ‘Operation Awase’, was set up to tackle the vandalism of the NNPC pipelines in Majidun, Ikorodu and other parts of the state.

According to Anka, the officers and men sighted by the communities around the pipelines were on legitimate duties. “There is no illegality in the operation of our men in any part of Lagos. We have since discovered that some people in some of the communities around the pipelines are part of the vandals,” Anka said.

“Any member of the communities where we are operating, without any criminal intention, is free to engage in lawful activities. But vandals will now have no peace in Lagos State,” the spokesman warned.

“We also solicit the cooperation of the host communities to give us information about the vandals,” he said.

“We have been operating in the last eight months. The main task of the joint operation is to flush out vandals of pipelines in the Lagos area and its environs,” Anka said.

NAN reports that some residents of Omoyele Street in the Majidun area of Ikorodu have complained of the presence of the military in the area.

The Army spokesman, however, did not mention Arepo area in Ogun State, as part of their coverage areas.

NAN also reports that men of the Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC) were securing some of the pipelines in Lagos and Ogun States before their contract with the NNPC reportedly expired about a week ago.

Meanwhile, some security experts have hailed the deployment of a Joint Military Task Force made up of the Nigerian Army and the Nigerian Navy, to secure the pipelines.

Mr Charles Anyanwu, a security consultant, said issues relating to security should not have been taken away from the military. He noted that giving such a responsibility to the ethnic militias was like making a mockery of the military, whose responsibility it ought to be.

Mr Jide Ageaga, the Head of Operations, Pendulum Security, also commended the federal government for terminating the contract with the militia. “This is how terrorism starts. When you allow a militia group with no training whatsoever in the handling of weapons, to be in possession of arms and ammunition, we may not know exactly how it may end.

“We just hope the arms in their possession are being accounted for or withdrawn from them by the authority in charge, to avoid any form of confrontation between the parties,” he said.

‎Another security consultant, Mr Jide Oluwole, however, urged the federal government to ensure that the military was consistent in maintaining its presence around the pipelines.

“One thing is for the military to take over the security of the pipelines, the other is to ensure that they consistently maintain their presence. I just hope they will not be withdrawn after some time,” he added. (NAN)

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