EMMANUEL SAMUEL Yola
The management of Dangote Sugar Refinery has denied the rumoured death of some staff members during a protest at its Numan, Adamawa State’s plant.
The protest was reportedly staged by some youths from its Gyawana host community and was later supported by some of the company’s staff members.
A statement from the management, signed by the Managing Director, Mr. Ravindra Singhvi, said neither was any of its staff members involved in the protest nor was anyone shot dead as insinuated in an online report.
The statement said, “The attention of the management of Dangote Sugar Refinery (DSR) has been drawn to an online report…about the death of some protesting staff members at our Sugar Refinery, in Numan, Adamawa State.
“We would like to state categorically that this report is an absolute falsehood. None of our staff protested and no life was lost. On several occasions, members of the Gyawana Youth Association have shut down the operations of the company while threatening staff on duty to stop work.
“The activities of these hoodlums have been reported to security operatives following which the Adamawa State Commissioner of Police and the State Director of Security Services invited the executives of the association and asked them to desist from interfering and threatening the DSR Numan’s staff and operations.
To protect our staff from external violence and ensure continuity, DSR Numan also obtained a Restraining Order from the Magistrate Court in Numan against the Gwayana Youth Association; an order they disobeyed, resulting in an arrest warrant issued by court against the Executives of the same Association.
Another threat was issued by the Youth Association on Thursday, July 15, 2021, about plans to forcefully enter and destroy the assets of the company and attack any person found within the company premises.
With this threat to life, family and company assets, management requested the assistance of law enforcement agencies in Numan to help protect life and assets of the company. The request was granted, and some officers were drafted in to secure the gates against the protesters.
“In a bid to prevent the protesting youths from forcefully shutting down the company’s operations, the law enforcement officers mounted a barricade at the entrance of the Company during which three people sustained minor injuries and were promptly taken to the hospital for treatment and discharged accordingly.
“We repeat that no single casualty was recorded during the protest as erroneously reported in the online publication. As a responsible corporate organisation, we believe in due process and rule of law and sanctity of human lives and that was why we went to court and also reported the disturbance to the security agencies.
“We also urge Sahara Reporters to always check thoroughly to have all the facts before rushing to the press as to avoid misleading the populace,” the Dangote authorities had explained.