The Federal Government , has disclosed that it will leave no stone unturned to put an end to oil pipeline vandalism and oil theft in the country.
According to Vanguard, the Minister of State for Petroleum,Oil, Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, made this assertions while speaking with journalists during his tour of oil facilities in the Niger-Delta.
While commending the management of Tantita Security Services Limited on its efforts in pipeline protection in the Niger-Delta, Lokpobiri, who was accompanied on the tour by the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, Mele Kyari, among other government officials, said the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu-led administration is determined to stop all forms of pipeline vandalism and oil theft in the country.
Lokpobiri said, “We’re here because of the problem of pipeline vandalism and illegal bunkering that are going on in the Niger Delta.
“I believe that it has become an existential problem and we need to fight them. We need to fight these criminals to submission.
“What is happening here is so bad that we cannot even know the implications unless maybe when people start dying in their numbers that is when people will know that a few persons were profiting from this crime. We are here to wipe all of them out.
“So as a responsible government, we have decided that we are going to put a stop to it.
“We are going to work with stakeholders to ensure that we stop all this nonsense in our society. We are not going to allow them.
“I want to also use this opportunity to express our gratitude to Tantita that has been commissioned by the NNPCL to be able to do some work but we are going to do a lot more.”
Also speaking, the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, said the Federal Government will sustain its partnership with Tantita Security Services Limited to curb the crime of pipeline vandalism and oil theft in the Niger-Delta.
He further said that the Federal Government will soon take additional measures to ensure that things change for the better in pipeline security.
Ribadu said, “We have done very well to get to where we are now. We are certainly going to take more measures. So far, things are beginning to change. Give us little time and you will see things change for the better.”