Home/News:Henry Okah never fought for N/Delta —Edwin Clark
Henry Okah never fought for N/Delta —Edwin Clark
•Says Okah was an arms dealer
Written by
Stephen Gbadamosi
LEADER
of the Ijaw nationality and elder statesman, Chief Edwin Kiagbodo
Clark, has taken a swipe at convicted coordinator of the Movement for
the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND), Henry Okah, declaring that the
Niger Delta militant did not, in actual fact, fight for the welfare of
the oil-rich region.
Chief Clark, who stated this in an exclusive interview with Sunday
Tribune, added that Mr Okah was only an arms trader who helped to fuel
the crisis in the Niger Delta with a view to increasing his volume of
business.
Okah was convicted on Monday, 21 January, by a Johannesburg, South
African court over his masterminding of the 1 October 2010 twin car
bombing that rocked Nigeria’s independence anniversary in the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja and claimed 12 lives.
It was upon his conviction that a purported faction of MEND protested
and threatened fresh round of attacks in the country to register its
rejection of the life jail conviction handed down to Okah.
But the frontline Ijaw leader, Clark, while reacting to this
pooh-poohed the threats, saying MEND, as it used to be known in those
days, was no more in the Niger Delta and that it would never rear its
head again.
“MEND, as far as I am concerned, no longer exists in the form it
existed years ago. Henry Okah was leading MEND only based on his
interest in the supply of guns. But the real fighters were Tompolo and
Ateke Tom.
“There was no time Henry Okah was fighting for the interest of the
Ijaw people or the people in the coastal areas of this country. He was
causing these wars in order to sell his arms and ammunition. He was a
merchant. That is the problem.
“When you talk about Jomo Gbomo, he is no different from Henry Okah.
He is also facing trial in Abuja. You know he is Henry Okah’s junior
brother,” he said.
Clark, who has been leading leaders of thought across the Southern
part of the country to meetings where the unity of the South are being
discussed, added that the people of the Niger Delta would not allow MEND
to return to the ravaged region.
“So, I can tell you that there is no MEND in the sense that we used
to hear it. It does not exist anymore and we will not allow it to exist
again,” Clark said.
While also explaining activities of the Southern Nigeria Peoples
Assembly, the Ijaw leader told Sunday Tribune that the group’s main aim
was to build a united Nigeria, where all components would be equal.
“We want a united Nigeria where no one section of the country would
say it is greater than the rest and where no one would be oppressed. If
we are more united from the South, the Northerners, who have 19 states,
would respect us. The North has always been together and I am happy that
we are also grouping to be more united so that we can strengthen
Nigeria,” he said.
Source:Nigerian Tribune
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