ODAHIEKWU OGUNDE, Yenagoa
Bayelsa State Governor, Senator Douye Diri, has urged the Federal Government to reconsider the provisions of the PIA for the good of the oil producing states and the interest of peaceful coexistence.
The governor described the Petroleum Industry Acts (PIA) recently signed into law by President Muhammadu Buhari as another step taken by the Federal Government to subordinate the oil producing states.
The governor spoke during a state banquet to mark Nigeria’s 61 years independence anniversary and 25th anniversary of the creation of Bayelsa in Yenagoa, the state capital.
He appealed to aggrieved interests across the country to stop bloodletting and use dialogue to resolve differences.
Diri said: “The recent passage and signing into law of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) which I have tagged ‘as a recipe for anarchy’, is yet another step taken to subordinate the oil producing states and make it more like a subordinate and superordinate relationship.
“There is a missing gap when the relationship of our dear state Bayelsa and indeed the Niger Delta states and the centre is affected. I keep saying it at all times, that everyday, we as a people, every Sunday, we go to Church to worship, every Friday the Muslims go to Mosque to worship, but we still have sins in our society.”
He said he would not be tired of talking about justice and freedom for Bayelsa and indeed the Niger Delta region.
Diri stressed: “And for us as a state, I like to let us know that our oil is diminishing, there is a forecast that very soon, nobody will trade on oil again. The European countries have already started doing away with fossils.
“Therefore, while the oil still lasts, even though we have only 13%, and 87% is appropriated to the Federal Government, we will continue to talk about it, but as we keep talking about it, we have to look for other ways of diversifying our economy in the state.
“We are gathered here today to honour and renew the dreams of our founding fathers, of an egalitarian and prosperous Bayelsa State and Nigeria.
“All of us here, particularly the founding fathers, will attest to the fact that Bayelsa has moved on. In 1996, we used a party secretariat as the Governor’s Office. There were no offices in Bayelsa State, and because of the passion the Ijaw nation attached to the creation of Bayelsa, everybody moved down here, not minding the lack of accommodation and all other things suffered by the state. The spirit was unity, the spirit was oneness. I plead with you Bayelsans that this is the time to continue to exhibit that spirit of unity and oneness.”