While speaking in an exclusive interview
with The Sun newspaper, an explosive expert and a stockpile read more.....
manager,
Professor Yakubu, who is also the managing director of Demining Concept
Nigeria Limited, raised an alarm over the possible explosion of 17,000
live bombs stockpiled in Owerri, the Imo State capital.
According
to him, the bombs which are said to be among those used during the
Nigerian Civil War, include 81 and 82 mm Mortar Bombs, 2” mortar bombs,
which are all area neutralising bombs; 100 mm air defence ammunition for
anti-aircraft defence and Fragmentation anti-personnel land mines.
Others are General purpose aerial bomb 75kg, Energa grenade, anti tank land mines locally made and small calibre ammunition.
He
disclosed that the 17,000 live bombs currently being stored at number
109, Achike Udenwa Avenue in new Owerri, a densely populated area, could
go off anytime, especially now that the rains are here, and cautioned
that if nothing is done to urgently dispose of these bombs, Owerri, may
be another theatre of horror.
Yakubu, who spoke during the
exclusive chat in Abuja, narrated how he got a contract from the federal
government in 2009 to clear land mines and explosive remnants in the
Southeastern part of the country, and had successfully removed over
18,000 explosives before he got a stop order from the Ministry of
Defence in 2012.
Before getting the stop order, Yakubu said
his company had successfully destroyed 608 land mines laid by the
federal government troops against the enemy at the time in the territory
of the former eastern region.
He said since then, he had
written several letters to the federal government and got no positive
result, but that things got worse with the coming on board of the
current Minister of Defence, Mansur Dan-Ali, who, he said “is playing tribal and religious politics with the issue.”
Yakubu, who said he was raising the alarm to alert Nigerians, the public and the world, of the impending dangers, said “despite
two court orders, one from the High Court Owerri, giving instructions
that those bombs should be relocated, the government has not shown
seriousness.”
He said: “In the whole of the
South-East, South-South and parts of North Central region of Nigeria,
there were a lot of explosive ordinance left after the civil war. We
took a technical survey of the entire area that was contaminated, and
from the various contaminated areas, we started removing bombs up till
the time we got a stop order from the Ministry of Defence. We had
removed 17,605 bombs, including locally made weapons like Ojukwu
buckets, Ogbunigwe rocket launchers which were all locally made. And we
had destroyed 608 land mines. “The land mines were laid by the federal
government against the enemy at the time in the territory of the former
eastern region. The work progressed until we got the stop order in 2012.
“Mine
action centre is a specific installation of the United Nations from
where you coordinate all mine actions which include removing bombs,
removing land mines, taking care of the injured and so on. “Now, we have
dug out where we put these bombs, and the heaviest bombs I have in that
place is 75 kilograms each, and I have two of them. We co-habit with
people on 109, Achike Udenwa Avenue in New Owerri. It is not too far
from the Concord Hotel.
“Remember that Ikeja, some years
back, had explosions, resulting from explosives from the depot. If such a
thing happens where we have these bombs today, sincerely speaking, I
don’t know how many casualties we are going to have in Owerri. First and
foremost, most people on that street, including us, would be gone.”
On what could lead to possible explosion of the bombs, Yakubu, said:
“If fire is thrown there, it will lead to an explosion. And now that we
are in the rainy season, it is possible from lightening, although we
have taken precautions against lightening. People could get into the
stockpiles and pick the bombs and go and use them elsewhere, that is
possible because in the past, like in Igwuruta, in Rivers State, I met
women who cracked palm-kernel with these bombs and when you try to stop
them from doing so they tell you they have been doing that in ages.
They don’t know the dangers of what they do.”
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