Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State, Senator Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, has asserted that the role of state governments has been deliberately whittled down in the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which implementation is expected to commence this August.
Senator Ewhrudjakpo made the assertion when he received in audience a high-powered 15-member delegation from the Bayelsa Amazons Advocacy Campaign Group in the Government House, Yenagoa recently.
Lamenting that governments in the oil and gas producing states in the Niger Delta region have virtually been reduced to mere observers, he noted that there were a lot of lacunas in the PIA which clearly put the oil-bearing areas at a disadvantage.
According to the Bayelsa State number two man, the prominent shortcomings in the Act, as passed by the National Assembly and assented to by President Muhammed Buhari denied the state governments their full participation in the implementation of the PIA.
His words, “We have some lacunas in the PIA law. You can’t deprive a man of his right and expect him not to complain. Considering the way that law is couched, they have actually reduced the role of the oil bearing states to that of a ‘siddon looker’.
“I’m really worried that those who made the law have, as usual, undermined the state in terms of exploration and management of oil resources. And you know that anything that does not have a legal backing, lacks the potency for its enforcement”.
Responding to some of the requests made by the BAACG, the Bayelsa number two man assured them that government would set up a committee to monitor and follow-up on the implementation of the PIA in the state.
Senator Ewhrudjakpo, who called on the group to properly articulate their agenda for gender equity, promised that the interest of women in Bayelsa State would be adequately protected in line with the provisions of the PIA.
In her remarks, the commissioner for Women Affairs, Social Development and Empowerment, Hon. Faith Opene explained that the agenda being championed by the women group was aimed at achieving 30 percent representation of women in the PIA implementation.
Speaking on behalf of the Bayelsa Amazons Advocacy Campaign Group, (BAACG), Comrade Princess Egbe, appealed to the state government to ensure the inclusion of women in the membership of the boards of trustees and the management committees for the PIA implementation in the oil-producing communities.
Comrade Egbe, who is the convener of the advocacy group, also demanded that capital funds be equitably distributed without any form of discrimination against women in the various oil-producing areas.
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