Plans to ensure the completion of BUA Refinery at the scheduled time may have suffered a setback as a fresh crisis is currently brewing at the BUA Refinery and Petrochemicals in Akwa Ibom state as a community has accused the oil firm of illegally encroaching into their land.
The community, Ekid, has threatened to shut down the refinery
complex insisting that the Stubbs Creeks Forest where the project is located is
their territory.
The Whistler reports that the development follows a lingering dispute between the community and their neighbours, Ibeno, over the ownership of the said land.
BUA Refinery and Petrochemicals, a 200,000-b/d integrated
refinery owned by Abdul Samad Rabiu, is located off the Atlantic Coast in the
Stubbs Creek Forest, an area being disputed by the people of Ibeno, Esit Eket
and Eket local government areas of Akwa Ibom state.
According to the Ekid people found in Eket and Esit Eket
Local Government Areas of the state, BUA should have followed the footsteps
taken by Mobil Producing Nigeria which had its operational base in the area by
meeting with the land owners and paying compensation accordingly before
acquiring the land.
In a document submitted to the Akwa Ibom State Land Use And
Allocation Committee and signed by the National President of Ekid People’s
Union, Dr Samuel Udonsak, they accused BUA of illegal encroachment on their
land without following due process.
“ExxonMobil Qua Iboe Terminal is situated in the Stubbs Creek
Forest Reserve.
“It was first dereserved, then the land acquired and
compensation paid to the Ekid people who are the landowners of the Stubbs
Creeks Forest.
“This is how land can be acquired in the Stubbs Creek Forest
and nobody should be cajoled by greed for lack of knowledge to regard Ibeno as
land owners of the Stubbs Creek Forest.
“That is what BUA ought to have done and must now do. Identify
the area of interest, and meet the land owners (Ekid people) and we would be
delighted to meet with them.
“With the secured lease terms from Ekid, the landowners, BUA
would then approach the government for land titles as appropriate, anything
less than that amounts to criminal encroachment and Ekid people will resist it
until eternity,’’ he said.
Last month, BUA group clarified that although the refinery
project was progressing, it was not yet 90 per cent completed as reported in
some quarters.
The tussle over the ownership of the land where the project is
located is one of the reasons for the slow pace of progress, according to the
community.
Efforts by NATIONAL WAVES to get BUA refinery to react to the
development did not yield positive results as its media consultant that was
contacted had yet to respond to our inquiries at the time of filing this
report.
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