CISLAC Decries Involvement of Security Agencies in Oil Theft

February 10, 2022
oil theft

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has decried the alleged involvement of military personnel and other security agencies in crude oil theft and illegal oil bunkering activities in the country.

According to the Executive Director of CISLAC, Mr Auwal Ibrahim Musa, all perpetrators must be held to account, adding that securitisation of oil pipelines should be promoted as a collective responsibility.

He made this assertion at the focus group discussion on the barriers and bridges to defence and security accountability in Nigeria, held in Port Harcourt, Rivers State capital.

Represented at the event by CISLAC’s Board of Trustees member, Mr Adesina Oke, he said Nigerians take the absence of political convergence as a free ride for military and other security-related operations without any limitations and without accountability, stressing that states must adapt to changing needs by prioritizing civilian protection and setting clearer ground rules, among other measures.

“Military and other security agencies’ involvement in oil theft remains a problem, with armed forces either turning a blind eye or actively profiting from the illegal oil trade throughout the process.

“There have been reports of soldiers protecting the tapping points, where crude oil is retrieved from illegally installed taps on the oil pipelines, of armed forces personnel turning a blind eye to, or indeed protecting, illegal bush refineries, and of soldiers soliciting bribes in return for the undisturbed passage for illegal oil transportations.

“Recent findings suggest that the issue does need to be investigated further and more data gathered to inform firmer conclusions and better-targeted policy recommendations.”

“Oil theft and pipeline vandalism threaten oil exploration and accruable revenue. In 2019, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation announced that it lost N159 billion to oil theft and pipeline vandalization.

“Defence and security stakeholders owe it a duty to design the pathway, that ensures that communities are safe, effective and meaningful; with these kinds of efforts to bring peace and stability in conflict.

“This incident confirms the gains of a combined formal security agencies-led and community involvement approach towards securitising oil facilities. The Ikwere model should be assessed to replicate it across the board. The securitisation of oil pipelines should be promoted as a collective responsibility.

“I urge you to strengthen sanctions that hold perpetrators to account. We must move beyond a victim mindset to understanding people and communities as agents of their own protection and experts of their own situation, people in communities who suffer the daily brutalities and violence do not wait for external intervention, this is a result of trust deficit that is damaged.”

Adedapo Adesanya

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

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