Yenagoa,
the Bayelsa State capital was thrown into pandemonium as residents ran for
cover when about 400 former militants protested the allocation of training
slots to them.
A
car parked along Otiotio road was razed and the windscreens of no fewer than 12
cars were smashed.
Shops
were randomly looted on this road and Mbiama-Yenagoa at Yenezuegene axis of the
state capital.
This forced panicky shop owners the area hurriedly close their
business premises. The panic caused a traffic gridlock, with many owners of
vehicles caught up in the melee, abandoned them right on the road.
The
quick intervention of the operatives of the Joint Military Taskforce (JTF),
anti-riot policemen, members of the State Security Outfit,”Operation Doo Akpor
“and Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps to the scene restored some
order.
Lt.
Colonel Onyema Nwachukwu , the spokesman for the Joint Task force confirmed
that the violence had been brought under control.
President
Goodluck Jonathan last year approved training courses for 3,642 ex-militants,
under the amnesty programme.
The
violent protest started in the area when the Inter-Agency Taskforce headed by
Air Vice Marshall Gbum on a verification exercise of ex-militants in the state
reportedly told them that 15 guns submitted by a militant camp would be
entitled to one training slot.
The
ex-militants rejected the allocation formula.
Daniel
Alabrah,the Spokesman of the Presidential Amnesty Office condemned the protest
by the ex-militants, noting that the destruction of the vehicles was lawless
and unnecessary.
Alabrah
clarified that the Amnesty Office had no hand in the allocation of slots to the
ex-militants, stressing that the Inter- Security Agency would only recommend
number of slots to them after its verification exercise.
It
was learnt that the Taskforce was appointed by the Chief of Defence Staff to
determine arms submitted by the reformed militants.
One
of the ex-militant leaders, who gave his name as Tonye Bobo, rejected the
proposed 15 guns to each slot. He posited that all the ex-militants who had
surrendered arms to embrace amnesty should be given a slot in the amnesty
programme.
He
said:” The federal government should abide by the agreement reached between
late President Umaru Yar’Adua and the ex-militant leaders.The proposed 15 guns
to one slot is unacceptable to us.”
“General” Ebi John,one of the ex-militant leader expressed
reservation on the controversial slots proposed to the ex-militants, as he
threatened more violence for the federal government.
PM NEWS.
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