My pains, my regrets, by Alamieyeseigha (2)

By JIDE AJANI, Deputy Editor

* The plan was that I should die in detention
* I am not an angel, he confesses

“I did 200metres rope climbing to the top of a platform once. It was suicidal. When the boys heard that the Governor-General had arrived, they stopped what they were doing. How many have I not done? You don’t pay ransom – ransom for what?  They released the hostages.  What makes you think that you are more Niger Deltan than me?


My parents are from that region and you say you are fighting for my cause and I’m the Chief Executive of a state and I don’t know more than you, that is bullshit.  They have derailed, criminality has set in. How can you kidnap my mother and you say you are fighting for the Ijaw cause,”  charged Diepreye Solomon Peter Alamieyeseigha, the former governor of Bayelsa State and the man Ijaws refer to as Governor General when Sunday Vanguard sought his views of  on the issue the

DSP Alamieyeseigha...kept in prison with murderers

DSP Alamieyeseigha...kept in prison with murderers

militants, amnesty and the roles of some governors and prominent leaders in not just the Delta region but Nigeria in general.

When last Sunday we declared that Nigerians were in for an exciting time, little did we know that we were actually taking part in a very historical event.  Calls have not ceased to come, just as views continue to be expressed regarding the nature, content and context of the Alamieyeseigha interview.
In this second part, Alamieyeseigha, who talked tough last week, tones down as he relieves his pains and regrets during his troubles with Obasanjo.

More interesting was his soberness when the issue of graft was discussed.
But that still did not stop him from making charges against Nuhu Ribadu and, you guessed right, Olusegun Obasanjo.
In terms of betrayals, ALAMS, as he is known in some quarters, discloses how a very close friend of his, a lawyer, prepared the impeachment notice which was used to remove him in a rather shambolic manner.

DID they see you bleeding or  did you complain to them?

They saw it; they saw that I was soaked.  They now took me to a police station and I was remanded in custody.

Were you kept in a cell or in an office?

This was in the cell till around 9pm from the morning when we arrived in London. By 9 pm, they came and brought my asset declaration forms. They asked me some questions, I answered to the best of my ability but at that point I told them that I needed to see a doctor. They did not listen to me.  They eventually brought a doctor who insisted that they must take me to the hospital and that I needed my drugs.  They brought my drugs from my bag.

Around 1am, they came with a form that I should sign. When I looked at it, they said they went to my house and they found money totaling one million pounds in different currencies and I told them I would not sign and I asked them why was I not taken to the house with them so I could verify the property list.
In any case, the form they brought was not signed by anybody.  I refused to sign the form. They said if I didn’t sign, all well and good. The following day around 12 noon, they released me.

Had the blood stopped by then?

No, but it had clotted. They said I should be signing in the nearest police station every day and that I should not travel out for almost five months that I should just be there. When I asked them why, they said what was required to prosecute me would come from Nigeria and that the materials were not ready yet.  They also said the Nigerian government said it would take it some five months to assemble the materials for my prosecution.

I came home and consulted my lawyer, Professor Odita, QC, SAN, a Nigerian. He went to vary the conditions of bail.  We went there and we did not spend three minutes in court, when I was discharged and acquitted.  As we came out of the court, people were already outside jubilating but once I came out, I was re-arrested and taken back to that same cell and this time around, they came up the following day with three charges:

One, that in 2000, 420, 000 pounds passed through me to a friend. Two, that in 2002, 475 pounds passed through me to an estate agent Three, approximately one million pounds was found in my house – that was on the day I was arrested. I was taken to court where my lawyer did not speak.  I later got to understand that any black man that goes to that court would be convicted.  They did not allow my lawyer to speak; I was remanded in prison custody.  Within 15 days, I had been made an inmate of two different prisons. I was kept with mad people for 15 days.
Mad people how?

I mean people who are mad, insane

Again, it is interesting how mad people behave.  Night is their day so you can never be allowed to sleep.  Every piece of paper they see, to them, is cigarette – I’d never seen something like this before in my life.  The second prison, I was kept with a murderer who kept coming in and out of prison.  He went to protest that I should be removed because when that spirit comes into him, in less than three minutes, he could kill and that he was praying that after this term, he should be taken to a rehab.

In fact, when he discovered that I couldn’t climb the double bunk, he conceded his lower deck to me.  He would normally prepare tea for me and if you see his body, wounds everywhere, smelling; I don’t know the spirit which got inside him but he it was who went to the supervisor and protested that he did not want to kill again, that he wanted to be left alone.  That was why they sent me back to Brixton prison.
How about medication?
After the 15th day, I was getting medication from Nigerians.
They had a clinic in prison and one Nigerian nurse was the matron, an Igbo woman, she was sympathetic.  So I was imprisoned for 15 days.

What was the most striking thing about the way the second court handled the case?

They didn’t allow my lawyer to speak, after the prosecution, judgment was pronounced by a lady.
The bail conditions were so stringent that anybody who attempted to bail me became a target.  Terry Waya was one of them and all the problems he had later was because he addressed a press conference and because he said he had 500, 000 pounds, they confiscated his money and everybody became scared to bail me. Eventually, people pledged their houses and the first person I called when I came out of prison was Obasanjo and he said ‘didn’t I tell you I will deal with you’. I called him the second time when Stella died, he was sober in that instance but the Obasanjo I know did not show any sign that he even lost somebody. My lawyers again went to court to seek my bail so I could come to Nigeria. Another judge, Evelyn, agreed, that this is an elected governor, and that if the prosecutor is not ready to prosecute, because ‘you claimed that all the materials you needed to do that were yet to come from Nigeria, you kept him here, how long are you going to keep him’?  She decided that she would grant me bail and that any day they were ready with their case, I could come back from Nigeria to face prosecution.

She said she was going to grant me bail that my lawyer and the crown prosecution should go and work out the modalities.  Everything was done, payments made, I had already obtained ticket to return to Nigeria, the morning my bail was to be pronounced, Bayo Ojo, former Attorney General and Minister of Justice appeared.  We greeted, he said ‘Excellency, I’m just coming from Nigeria straight to the court here this morning, I was already in bed when Mr. President called me to tell me that you were going to be granted bail and that I should come and stop it’.

And Ojo went into the court and told the court that Nigeria did not need me; that I had a deputy who could handle my office; that I should be kept in London until my case was determined; that the government of Nigeria, under President Obasanjo, did not need me to come back home. Judge Evelyn was herself shocked.

She said that Nigeria was writing a new chapter in judicial matters, that in all her career as a judge, she had never seen a situation where a sovereign nation would go to another sovereign nation and say that its national should not be allowed to come home; that it used to be the other way; that when somebody commits an offence, they run away to another land, but this is a man you have said committed all the offences in this world, he wants to go back home and yet, you people are saying that we should help you keep him here in London.  At that point one of their prosecution lawyers said what they were asking for was cooperation; that Nigeria is an ally and that Britain could not afford to have any confrontation with Nigeria and that if the only request was to keep him in Britain, in his house and not in prison, why not oblige. The judge kept quiet for a while and cancelled the application afterwards. I returned home but on the way, Bayo Ojo begged me, that he was only doing his job.
How did you get back to Nigeria – as a pregnant woman or as a man?

The Metropolitan police was always visiting me at home everyday at their own time and they would search the house and anything they saw, they would carry.  So after three days at home, they came again as usual and asked me to dress up, I dressed up and followed them.

I thought they were taking me to their police station but this time they passed through Nigeria House, and we went outside London to another airport – not Heathrow, not Gatwick – and they said I should enter an aircraft that was waiting and I asked them where I was being taken and they said just go and solve your problem at home, we no longer believe in your case. Since the day your justice minister came to this country, we’ve lost interest in your matter.  I entered the aircraft, they flew me to Ivory Coast, they did not even shut down, I alighted from the plane and they left.

Just like that?

Yes, just like that.  I was a frustrated man and I couldn’t go through Immigration because I had no passport.  I just walked into the arrival hall and sat on the floor because at that time I was really frustrated.  I was there thinking of what to do when somebody tapped me on the back and I turned, it was Alhaji Yahaya, from Gombe.
How did he know you were there?  Was he a friend or was he waiting for you there?
No, I think I’d seen his face before but I couldn’t place it.  He looked like one of the Nigerians I had stumbled on during the case because many people were pouring into my house in London during the case and many of them were very sympathetic.

Transacting business

Even the former vice President, Alex Ekwueme; Solomon Lar had to come from Holland. Many people were just coming around everyday from different parts.  I remember seeing him otherwise he had never been to Bayelsa neither had he visited me here in Nigeria.

He tapped me and asked what I was doing there.  The only thing I could also say was to ask him what he was doing there and he said he came to transact a business and was on his way back to Nigeria, that he had a private chartered jet. I asked if I could join him, he said yes.

Bu t how could somebody departing come in contact with somebody who had arrived?  Were the security men not aware of your presence at the airport terminal?

The plane which brought me was a private jet and not the usual commercial plane.  I didn’t walk into the immigration.  I remember he gave those gendarmes $200 to allow me because he spotted me and came over to meet me.
I entered the plane with him and when we were about to take off, I saw one of the pilots. Apparently, I used to charter their plane back in Nigeria, so they knew me. We came, landed in Lagos and they offered that they were going to Abuja but that they could drop me in Port Harcourt.  It was at that point in Lagos that I got a phone to call my ADC to meet me at the airport in Port Harcourt.  We got to Port Harcourt airport late, they dropped me and we took off that night to Amasoma, my village, no escort, nothing. We just moved into my village.
The crowd that came when they heard that I had returned was something else; and this sent a positive or negative signal to Obasanjo whom I was told was in Sokoto.  People came around to welcome me.

What was Obasanjo’s reaction?

He ordered soldiers and policemen into Bayelsa.  300 mobile policemen were drafted to Government House Yenagoa.  Air Force helicopter was overflying my house. Meanwhile, he had ordered that they should deal with me in Amasoma and because of Obasanjo’s antecedents I had to flee to Yenagoa where I was driving out and driving in even in the presence of the security men.

How did your impeachment crystalise?

I’m aware, it was a Lagos lawyer (name withheld) who drafted the impeachment notice.  He was a close friend of mine. He was the one who drafted my impeachment notice. He was the one who took the assembly men to Lagos. He was the one who took them to EFCC office in Lagos, himself, Larmode, Bello and Mangu.

The members were lined up one after the other. If you signed  the impeachment notice, you would be let off. If you refused to sign, you were kept there – those who refused to initially sign were not allowed to go until they signed.  They again bundled them, under escort, took them to Abuja in a plane.

About N18 million was paid from a Federal Government agency to settle their hotel accommodation.  From there, under escort, they took them to Bayelsa to pronounce my impeachment. I was not served with any impeachment notice.  I saw it on the pages of newspapers. I was not invited to defend the charges.  I don’t think they even ever sat.  One man wrote the report.  They have been begging me. People have begged, the members of the panel, even their signatures were forged. I knew when they were going to do everything from Abuja to Bayelsa.  For that operation they removed the commissioner of police and brought another person, the state director of SSS was also changed. They came to me. So many calls were coming in that I should react so that there would be a state of emergency.

Nobody arrested me.  I called the commissioner of police after their so called impeachment.  I was in Government House, my father and mother were there.  I came out, told my parents to go back to Amasoma that I would come back. They escorted me from Yenagoa – combined effort of Rivers State Police Command, Bayelsa and Delta State commands, and helicopter was also flying over our heads.In Abuja, another helicopter was used to fly me to Police headquarters. I was there until December 13 and on December 14, 2005, around 12 midnight, led by Police Superintendent Mangu, I was taken to immigration in Abuja to do passport under escort.  That is the passport I’m still using – to do passport at12 midnight.

Obasanjo had instructed that I must be flown back to London. They took my passport to the British High Commission for visa, those ones refused.

Why did they refuse?

They said the man committed the offences you’re talking about in Nigeria, that while I was in London, they waited endlessly for materials with which to prosecute me and nothing came, that the man is already here in Nigeria, that don’t we have laws to deal with him here in Nigeria.  ‘We don’t want him’, they said. I was forced by Ribadu to write a letter, voluntarily saying I wanted to go back to London.

I wrote and gave to him, Femi Falana was there when I wrote that letter to Ribadu, he was an eye witness. The letter was taken to the High Commission. The people from the High Commission were invited to Police Headquarters. They were invited to the Villa, they tried to intimidate them to no avail. They refused to grant me visa. It was at that point when they had failed that they brought me to Lagos to begin my trial – before the activists started  complaining.  That was how I found my way into the EFCC prison in Lagos.

By this time, the operated area had become so bad; my stomach had become infected that I could no longer walk.  They now took me to a hospital where they opened me up three times to drain all the infections. They again took me to another hospital where the management of the hospital turned down their diabolical plans and the hospital refused to do their bidding. By 5:30 in the morning, without the hospital authorities knowing, EFCC people again came to pick me up to Ibadan, UCH.  On the way, two of the operatives inside the car sent me a note that sir, where you’re going, you’re going to be poisoned.

Of course we went to Ibadan. A woman who headed  one of the departments there saved the situation.  The woman had knowledge of what was to happen to me and she didn’t want to be part of it. So she came to the hospital very early that morning and created a scene.  They returned me to the vehicle and brought me  to Lagos and this time I wasn’t taken to the hospital but to their cell. Obasanjo now instructed that I should be brought to Abuja and straight to the National Hospital. Of course, the thinking was that the CMD and his own personal physician would do the magic. I don’t want to go into it. Again, it was properly managed and I did not die.

How long did you spend in the EFCC prison?

All together it was about two yearsWould you not agree that certain things were done by you which gave the EFCC the opportunity to swoop on you?  Or would you say you were pure and perfect or that you didn’t commit any offence?

There is nobody dead or alive that was a governor of a state and would say that everything you did was perfect or pure.

How can I claim to have been perfect or pure? That would be a lie. Every week, you are in the office things just happen that were never planned for. Look at this scenario:  a lady walks into your office and she is in labour, she has no money to go to the hospital.

Would you say because of procedure, you will allow that woman to die? There are so many things that are unplanned for as a governor that will come your way. I am not saying that I’m an angel, no. But the questions to ask are: Was I treated fairly? Was the rule of law followed? What if I had died in the process? And all these started because one man called me into his office and said I should support him instead of another, and, thereafter threatened to deal with me.

But the EFCC said that they recovered the sum of N50billion from you?

That was what the EFCC chairman went to tell the Senate and because it was the issue at the moment, even the Senate did not ask questions. How much at that time, was used to float a bank, that somebody, in 2005 would have N50 billion. Was that money recovered in the banking system or was it packed in a warehouse? Now, where is the money? In which account and what is the interest rate?

Nigerians should ask questions? This is 2009, if indeed such an amount was recovered from me, is it not enough time for that type of money to be returned to the state government if indeed I stole the money? I did not work for the Federal Government of Nigeria; it’s supposed to be money belonging to Bayelsa State government. The people need money, N50 billion will at least give them good roads. Is it not time for the EFCC to return the N50 billion to the Bayelsa State government.  Since that was the money Ribadu claimed to have recovered, let them go and bring it from where they kept it.

They said I have a refinery in Ecuador, I have never been to Ecuador all my life.

Is it not so easy to find out since we have an embassy there. Is it difficult to find out if a non-national can have that type of investment in another country, without knowing the identity? They also said I have a wrist watch that only me and the Sultan of Brunei have. In fact, one barrister kept hammering that I have a wrist watch worth  N2.5million and that it was only two of us that have it. So, after the two wrist watches were manufactured, was it that the factory was closed down?  Did I carry  N2.5million to Switzerland or where it was manufactured (a place which I don’t know) to pay there and where is the wrist watch?

How much did you receive as a state governor?

How much did I receive as a governor for six and a half years? I received N255billion. Go to Bayelsa State and audit whether the money was spent there.

What did you return to the EFCC?

Houses I had, I gave them. Let them bring out the money they said they have seen I don’t have money. They should search and say how much money they recovered from me. During my 2003 campaign, I realised N1.75billion from fund raising. The chairman of the fund raising was Major-General Jemibewon (rtd) and everything is on video, who and who gave what. But there was no opposition in Bayelsa then and so, I just spent over N200million. That was the whole money I spent on that election. I felt since my children were not on scholarship, I said let me send the money to them to take care of their school. It was about  N1.75million.

Then in Nigeria, I had N105million too and they took all of that in one bank. That is the money they said I have stolen. What they (EFCC) did to that  1.75million was to break it into bits at different times and all those ones were the charges. The number one charge was Chelsea Hotel.  The hotel was bought by the state government and it was budgeted for. None of the management members of the hotel knew me, I did not negotiate with any of them; it was state investment. We paid N1.5 billion and we said this is what is in the budget and we agreed. In 2006, Vice President Goodluck Jonathan as governor then, paid the balance. How then did the hotel become my hotel? That was the number one charge. You can go to the streets of Yenagoa and interview people to ask them: Who was Alamieyeseigha? Anybody that was in Yenagoa between 1999 and 2005 will have something to say about me.
You were in Dubai at some point?

Yes.  I was also taken to Dubai for treatment. 12 security men were guiding me when I was in Dubai receiving treatment. If I was  going to the toilet, they would follow me.

How long did you stay there?

I was there for about two and a half months.

And the government was paying for all these?

In fact, I was responsible for my hotel accommodation. Sometimes, I would stay in the hospital some times I would go to my hotel room. Some governors came to visit me – Orji Kalu, James Ibori, Lucky Igbinedion, Bafarawa and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar. Now, Ribadu came to Dubai and generated a letter that I was planning to over throw the government of Nigeria from Dubai and that I was attending parties and all that; that the Dubai government was purported to have written that I was persona non grata and that I should be deported from Dubai immediately.
I was whisked away and brought to Nigeria.   Two weeks after, Ribadu came to me and said ‘DSP, the level we have gone, I should accept plea bargain. It has been arranged, you will not spend one day in cell.’ Of course, I don’t want to mention names, higher powers also intervened. They said to me ‘DSP, they will kill you the way you are going, if you stay there’. I was reminded of how the senior Yar’Adua died, I was reminded of how Abiola was killed and nothing has happened. They told me ‘we need you to be alive, whatever they want, give them and come out.’
So, my brother that was how it went.

When last did you speak to Obasanjo?

I saw him not too long ago on a flight. I was going to Dubai and he said he was on his way to Saudi Arabia. He was just behind me. I don’t know how it happened, but he was behind me.
Did you speak to him first or was it the other way round?
He came in and said ‘Ah, DSP’ and we greeted. He greeted me first and he asked me ‘where are you going to?’ I said I was going to Dubai and I also asked him ‘Where are you heading to, he said ‘I’m going to Saudi Arabia’.

Interest groups

I said ‘Mr President, are you not surprised that I am alive talking to you?’
What was his response?

He said ‘DSP, people who did nothing in this world, they killed them for just nothing’.
The Federal government is trying to package amnesty for the militants and as a leader in Niger Delta, what approach would you want the Federal government to take in solving the problems?

The problems by now would have been solved if not for selfish interest groups. When I came out of detention, I had useful discussions with Mr. President, one because he was my colleague. The interest groups you talk about are they the making of past governors or the past federal government or the present governments? It’s all round. Take bunkering for example, you see these boys that are bringing the big ships from other countries to the Niger Delta to take away our oil, do they have connection with military to bring ships to come and load oil? Who are those bringing those ships? We hear of all these shootings, when there is disagreement on how the proceeds are to be shared.  Even former military chiefs have vessels to do bunkering.

All this information are available before government. Kidnapping and abduction  a new phenomenon. Whatever it is, they have derailed, it is criminality now. But some blame the governors for not taking action. They say how can a government be in place and the boys are operating in the creeks and the governors are helpless?

How can they say they are helpless? Was I not a governor before? Didn’t you hear once I was in London on official delegation of the former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Obasanjo called me to return immediately; I did not even check in, I returned to Nigeria, I flew economy to get to Abuja, flew to Port Harcourt and took a helicopter straight to Brass; I went by boat to the high sea. I did 200metres rope climbing to the top of the platform. It was suicidal.

How did you do 200metres rope climbing?  With this your frame?

Of course, what are you talking?  I was a military man
I’had never taken that type of risk in my life.

But you were able to contain the situation?

Of course, I ordered immediate release of the hostage. When they heard that the governor-general had arrived, they stopped what they were doing. How many have I not done? You don’t pay ransom – ransom for what?
This is my country and I know the risks I have taken regarding this so called Niger Delta problem. Obasanjo himself knows

What makes you think that you are more Niger Deltan than me?

My parents are from that region and you say you are fighting for my cause and I’m the chief executive and I don’t know more than you, that is bullshit.

They have derailed, criminality has set in. How can you kidnap my mother and you say you are fighting for the Ijaw cause. They have gone beyond reason and it’s not acceptable.

168 Responses for “My pains, my regrets, by Alamieyeseigha (2)”

  1. Bolou Oduruku says:

    ALAMI,NA STORY MERCHANT.

  2. Chika says:

    I am not a fan of ALAMs, but he has raised some important issues:

    Let the world ask Ribadu and Nigerian Govt. to return the N50billion they said that was recovered from ALAMs to Bayelsa people. OR can’t Bayelsa opposition party members make the request to shame PDP?

    Thats all I have to say – He has benefited from what I call UNKNOWN SOLDIER syndrome (give a dog a bad name & hang him). I no sorry for am at all (he and other past & present governors are part of Niger Delta problems, OBJ used and dumped him, why complain now!)

  3. ann smith says:

    wow.Alams that was a very painful ordeal.As you rightly said you are not an angel.He who is without sin let him cast the first stone.You are very brave for standing up to the likes of OBJ and his cohorts.It is very sad that some evil minded people think that Nigeria is their personal property and so can do whatever they like with our beloved country.Thanks for speaking out.More grease to your elbows.

  4. kedu says:

    story story …story./…liar!!!!!!!!!!!

  5. Johnnie Agbodike says:

    Patrick Agbolu you seems to be Obasanjo disciple,If what he(DSP) is saying is lie,let OBJ or Ribadu say something…..
    You don’t have to be cursing DSP like that,if you dnt know how to comment or contribute better back off….
    Talking about stolen money….how many of them has not stolen from the people? We just need to Pray for our dear country Nigeria for a change.

    Johnnie Agbdike
    Kuala lumpur
    Malaysia

  6. Patrick Agbobu says:

    THESE LEADERS MUST STOP TALKING OF AMNESTY AS AMNESTY IS FOR THOSE WHO COMMIT CRIMES. THE PEOPLE OF THE NIGER DELTA DID NOT COMMIT ANY CRIME BECAUSE WE HAVE CURDE OIL AND GAS. WE HAVE BEEN SUSTAINING THE WHOLE COUNTRY. ABUJA AND EVIRONS WAS BUILT WITH THE MONEY FROM THE NIGER DELTA. THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SHOULD USE THE SAME SPEED THEY USED IN BUILDING ABUJA, TO BUILD AND DEVELOPE THE NIGER DELTA. WE SHOULD STOP BEING APOLOGETIC AS IF WE ARE THE OFFENDERS. THE PEOPLE OF THE NIGER DELTA ARE THE VICTIMS. IF THEY ARE CRIMINALS IN THE NIGER DELTA, THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD GO AFTER THEM. THEY SHOULD NAME AND SHAME THEM, INCLUDING THEIR BACKERS AND COLLABORATORS.
    WHAT IS REQUIRED IN THE NIGER DELTA IS IMMEDIATE MASSIVE ECCONMIC DEVELOPEMENT OF THE AREA AND iMMIDIATE AND MASSIVE ECCONOMIC EMPOWERMENT OF THE PEOPLE OF THE NIGER DELTA. USE THE EXCESS CRUDE MONEY, USE PART OF THE EXTERNAL RESERVE, INTRODUCE WINDFAL TAX ON THE COMPANIES THAT CAUSED THE PROBLEM AND USE THE MONEY TO PROGRESS AND DEVELOPE THE NIGER DELTA. WE NEED AN IMMEDIATE MARTIAL PLAN IN THE NIGER DELTA. PURSUE THIS MARTIAL PLAN, WITH THE SAME ZEAL, VIGOR AND ENTHUSIAZM, AS WAS USED IN BUILDING ABUJA AND ENVIRONS. NO MORE SLOGANS, NO MORE TALKS, NO MORE TITLE TATLE, NO MORE INFANTILE APPROACH TO THE PROBLEMS OF THE NIGER DELTA. NO MORE POSTPONNING OF ACTIONS, NO MORE PROMOSES. IF THEY ARE CRIMINALS JAIL THEM, NAME AND SHAME THEM. NAME THEIR SUPPORTERS AND COLLABORATORS. WE WANT ACTION! ACTION!! ACTION!!! AND WE WANT IT NOW! NOW! NOW!!! NOW!!!. MISS THIS OPPORTUNUTY TO RIGHT THE PAST WRONGS AND MISS IT FOR EVER. MAKE HISTORY MR PRESIDENT.
    Mr. President now that you have shown good faith, you must take the next bold step. Mr. President you must now put tuor money where your mouth is.
    We want ACTION, ACTION ACTION from now on. Mr. President you have taken a very bold step and you must continue as relaxing is not an option NOW.
    The problem in the Niger Delta was caused by the followings,
    1. The International Multi National companies in the Niger Delta. These companies operate as cow boys and with reckless abandon, They have destroyed the environment, the waters, the lands of the Niger Delta. They polluted the waters, lands and the environment and as a result, the people can not farm on their lands or fish in their waters, which is their main occupations. The people are dieing dailly of diseases, caused by the polution to the environment. These multi nationals build cheap infrastrutures like pipe lines etc., without regards to internationally accepted norms and good practices. There will never do such things in other parts of the world, where they are operating, otherwise they will pay very dearly for such horrible practices. The multi Nationals have made a lot of money from these sharp practices, at the expence of the lives of the people of the Niger Delta.
    2. The next offenders are federal and state governments of all shades, both past and present, who have made lot of money by ignoring and encouraging with nods, the multi National companies to get away with murder. .
    3. The third group are the so called selfish leaders, or do i say dealears of the Niger Delta, who have also made a lot of money from the sufferings of the people of The Niger Delta, Some of the them and their collaborators, sponsor the criminals, to forment and cause a lot of sufferings to the people of the Niger Delta.
    4. The President must without futher delay, publish the names of those, who have been sponsoring these criminals in the Niger Delta. The President must name and shame them.
    Now that you have given amnesty, to the genuine agitators, we should now have a truth and reconcilliation commitee, so that we can learn a lesson from all these.
    WHAT THE PRESIDENT SHOULD DO NOW!!
    The federal government should introduce, a wind fall tax on the huge profits, the multi nationals made over the period and use ALL the money for the IMMEDIATE developement of the Niger Delta and the ecconomic empowerment of the people of the Niger Delta. This is what is done, even in developed countries. In Great Britain, when the Labour came into power, they introdued the wind fall tax, inorder to claw back some of the huge profits, the companies made, when the Conservative party in government, sold very cheaply all government companies during the Privatization process. ALL the money realised was used to creat new jobs and train the unemployed. This move was very popular with the British public. You should bear in mind that, most of the companies, that made the huge profits in The Niger Delta, are British and American companies. This move will be popular in Nigeria and these British and American companies will not fault it. All you have to do is, to refer them to what happened in the United kingdom.
    ALL the money realised from the excess crude, which was got any way, from the Niger Delta, should be used for the immediate ecconomic development and empowerment of the people of the Niger Delta.
    The federal government should draw down now, 30% of its external revenue for the immediate ecconomic developement of the Niger Delta and ecconomic empowerment of the people of the Niger Delta. The ferderal government should not give the usual excuse, that this draw down will affect the value of the naira, as this is a price that, we should pay for the peace and stability of the Niger Delta and Nigeria. ALL THESE MUST BE DONE NOW!! Mr. President do all these and you have solved the problems in The Niger Delta permanently. If you do ALL of these history and prosterity will remember you very kindly.

    MR PRESIDENT I HOPE THAT THERE IS NO HIDDEN AGENDA, WITH THIS AMNESTY OF A THING. IT APPEARS THAT THE WAY YOU ARE PURSUING AND PROGRESSING IT, IS BECOMMING WORRYING AND I HOPE YOU ARE NOT UNDER EXTREME PRESSURE, FORM THE CORRUPT AND INDICTED EX GOVERNORS, AS MOST OF THEM ARE THE BACKERS AND COLLABORATORS OF THE CRIMINAL ELEMENTS IN THE NIGER DELTA. THEY ARE MAKING BLOOD MONEY IN ADDITION TO THE ONE THEY LOOTED AND STOLE FROM THE TREASURY. THESE CORRUPT AND INDICTED EX GOVERNORS AND THEIR COLLABORATORS STAND TO BENEFIT MASSIVELY FROM THIS BLANKET AMNESTY OF A THING. YOU SHOULD ALSO REMEMBER THE UNIFORMED PERSONS YOU SENT TO THE NIGER DELTA AS THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF OF NIGERIA, TO MENTAIN THE PEACE AND SOME OF THEM WERE SLAUGHTERED IN COLD BLOOD BY THE CRIMINALS.
    THESE CORRUPT AND INDICTED EX GOVERNORS, ARE THE SAME PERSONS, WHO CLAIMED THAT THEY BANK ROLED YOUR ELECTION AND THEY ARE NOW SAYING THAT THEY WILL ALSO, BANK ROLE YOU 2011 ELECTION. MR PRESIDENT YOU MUST CLEAR THE AIR. NIGER DELTA DOES NOT WANT AMNESTY, AS AMNESTY IS FOR THOSE THAT COMMITED CRIMES, WE IN THE NIGER DELTA DID NOT COMMIT ANY CRIME BY HAVING CRUDE OIL AND GAS. I AM SICK AND TIRED OF PEOPLE PATRONISING US AND THIS MUST STOP.
    AMNESTY IS NOT AMNESTIA. WHAT IS REQUIRED IN THE NIGER DELTA IS IMMEDIATE MASSIVE ECCONMIC DEVELOPEMENT OF THE AREA AND IMMEDIATE AND MASSIVE ECCONOMIC EMPOWERMENT OF THE PEOPLE OF THE NIGER DELTA. USE THE EXCESS CRUDE MONEY, USE PART OF THE EXTERNAL RESERVE, INTRODUCE WINDFAL TAX ON THE COMPANIES THAT CAUSED THE PROBLEM AND USE THE MONEY TO PROGRESS AND DEVELOPE THE NIGER DELTA. WE NEED AN IMMEDIATE MARTIAL PLAN IN THE NIGER DELTA. PURSUE THIS MARTIAL PLAN, WITH THE SAME ZEAL, VIGOR AND ENTHUSIAZM, AS WAS USED IN BUILDING ABUJA AND ENVIRONS. NO MORE SLOGANS, NO MORE TALKS, NO MORE TITLE TATLE, NO MORE INFANTILE APPROACH TO THE PROBLEMS OF THE NIGER DELTA. NO MORE POSTPONNING OF ACTIONS, NO MORE PROMOSES. IF THEY ARE CRIMINALS JAIL THEM, NAME AND SHAME THEM. NAME THEIR SUPPORTERS AND COLLABORATORS. WE WANT ACTION! ACTION!! ACTION!!! AND WE WANT IT NOW! NOW! NOW!!! NOW!!!. MISS THIS OPPORTUNUTY TO RIGHT THE PAST WRONGS AND MISS IT FOR EVER. MAKE HISTORY MR PRESIDENT. ABUJA WAS CREATED IN LESS THAN TEN YEARS, WITH MONEY MADE FROM THE NIGER DELTA, WHY NOT THE NIGER DELTA WHERE ALL THE MONEY OF NIGERIA WAS MADE, THIS INCLUDES EXCESS CURDE AND THE HUGE EXTERNAL RESERVE.
    START THE IMMEDIATE MASSIVE DEVELOPEMENT OF THE NIGER DELTA NOW!!!!!!
    Amnesty International has described the crisis in the Niger Delta as a “human rights tragedy,” saying that the people of the area have seen their human rights abused by oil companies which their government cannot hold to account. The group, in a report released on Tuesday, said the situation in the Niger Delta, home to 31 million people, has fuelled anger and conflict. “People living in the Niger Delta have to drink, cook with, and wash in polluted water; they eat fish contaminated with oil and other toxins – if they are lucky enough to still be able to find fish,” said the report. The report stated that the situation in the Niger Delta provides a stark example of the lack of accountability of a government to its people, and of multinational companies’ almost total lack of accountability when it comes to the impact of their operations on human rights. The report titled, “Petroleum, Pollution and Poverty in the Niger Delta”, was presented by its Head of Business and Human Rights, Audrey Gaughran. It examined oil spills, gas flaring, waste dumping and other environmental impacts of the oil industry, stressing that evidence gathered on pollution and environment damage relates to the operations of Shell, the main oil company operating on land in the Niger Delta. The agency said that the human rights impact of pollution in the Niger Delta is greatly under-reported, adding that the majority of people in the area depend on the natural environment for their food and livelihood, particularly through agriculture and fisheries. Amnesty blames both the government and multi-national oil giants for the rights abuses in sub-Saharan Africa’s most populous country.

    MR. PRESIDENT YOU ARE NOT LISTENING. YOU SHOULD USE NIGER DELTA MONEY TO DEVELOPE THE NIGER DELTA IMMEDIATELY. ABUJA AND ENVIRONS WERE RAPIDLY DEVELOPED WITH THE MONEY FROM THE NIGER DELTA. THE SAME INTEREST AND SPEED THAT WAS USED TO DEVELOPE ABUJA SHOULD BE USED TO DEVELOPE THE NIGER DELTA. THIS WILL BE A WIN WIN FOR NIGERIA. THE CRISES WILL STOP, INVESTMENTS WILL RUSH IN, THE YOUTHS WILL BE GAINFULLY EMPLOYED, NIGERIA WILL MAXIMISE HER CRUDE OIL AND GAS PRODUCTIONS,TOURISM WILL FLORISH, NIGERIAN INTELLECTUALS AND BUSINESS PEOPLE ABROAD WILL COME BACK TO NIGERIA AND CREATE A LOT OF JOBS. AS LITTLE AS 100,000.00 (ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND) POUNDS COULD ESTABLISH A SMALL COTTAGE INDUSTRY OF A SMALL FARM AND ABOUT SIX WELL PAID JOBS CAN BE CREATED. BY SIMPLE CALCULATION, ABOUT ONE MILLION NIGERIANS ABROAD CAN RAISE THIS TYPE OF MONEY. THAT IS ABOUT SIX MILLION NEW JOBS. MR. PRESIDENT LISTEN! LISTEN!! LISTEN!!! LISTEN!!!. TIME IS NOT ON OUR SIDE AND YOUR SIDE MAKE HASTE NOW!!!!!
    MR. PRESIDENT WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE NIGER DELTA IS A CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY AND GENOCIDE.

  7. samson sia sia says:

    DSP, I believe all that you have said because I was in the picture. I disagree with you where you now want to link criminal elements to our freedom fighters. By so dong, you are giving the wrong signal to Abuja. There is kidnappings and worse things happening in other states and no one is blamiing the militants. Remeber that MEND put pressure on OBJ throughout your ordeal so it is ungrateful of you to tie crime that was done by petty criminals to our freedom fighters. I will not forgive you if you do not know what is at stake here.

  8. Zuby Z|arita says:

    The amount of money mentioned in this interview is making me faint and wake up. The title should not be the pains of Alamieyeseigha or wateva name his dear parents gave him but rather the adventures of Alams. Imagine flying to London, private jet, Dubai,hotel lodgine etc.
    With all of these luxuries brother Alams, how ,where,when and what pains are you talking about? Both you and Obasanjo will pay some way or the other for all the pains and sufferings you both inflicted on the Bayelsan and nigerian populace!

  9. Patrick Agbobu says:

    DSp Alamieyeseigha you will remain a curse and a disgrace to yourslf and family. You are worst than the murderers, you claimed you stayed with. You brough dishonour and shame to the good and genuine good people of the Niger Delta, fighting for fairness and justice in the Niger Delta. I do not blame you, those i blame are the people and media, that give you the effontry and space, to futher inflict futher pains, on the people of the Niger Delta. May be you and your types have used your looted funds to buy participations in these news media. Had it been we were in China, you could have been shot publicly, for stealing and looting public funds. You were almost impecunious before you went, into your so called politics. You are so shameless, that you have lost all forms of decency and decorum. You are an exconvict and a convicted felon. You stole the money of your fellow brothers and sisters. You stole money that, could have been used to provide, health care and hospitals, schools, employments, dividents of democracy, water, light, roads, etc. for you fellow brothers and sisters in your state and the Niger Delta. SHAME ON YOU. Our Almighty God and our ancestors, will surely destroy all those, that have brought untold hardship to the people of the Niger Delta.

  10. Let me believe that ALAM’s is saying the true ironically,because i’m yet to believe this new ’seasons 24′ is also going on in Nigeria.But ALAM’s has tactically left how & why he was dressed in female attire.Pls,answer explicitly.

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