How Buhari Govt. Wants to Use Me to Arrest GEJ - Tompolo Vows to Return to the Creeks in New Struggle
Ex-militant
commander, Tompolo has accused the President Buhari-led federal
government of planning to use his arrest to get at former President
Goodluck Jonathan.
Tompolo
In a exclusive interview with SaharaReporters,
former operations commander of the Movement for the Emancipation of
the Niger Delta (MEND), Government Ekpemupolo, popularly know as
Tompolo, has accused the Federal Government of planning to use his
arrest to get at former President Goodluck Jonathan.
Tompolo, who is a fugitive having so far declined to answer a
summons by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), said the
former president was the primary target of the Buhari administration,
adding that the government's plan to arrest him was a smokescreen to get
at Goodluck Jonathan.
The former militant warlord also alleged that his father, who died
last week, was physically assaulted by Nigeria's security agents on May
26, 2016 when they invaded Kurutie town in the Gbaramatu local
government area where his late father, Thomas Ekpemupolo, resided before
his death.
According to him, the soldiers who attacked his aged father also
ransacked his and others' homes in the community, adding that his late
father suffered serious bodily injuries which resulted in the amputation
of his lower limbs.
"I am just a victim of circumstances. I am just a perceived
enemy of the government. The intention of the government was to arrest
former President Goodluck Jonathan. But they feel that arresting
Jonathan without arresting me may be difficult, that was the reason why
they are after me," Tompolo said in the interview.
He offered more details on his father’s death, stating, "It
happened in the early hours of Saturday May 28, 2016 when the Nigerian
Army, under the guise of looking for members of the Niger Delta Avengers
and of course my humble self, who they have accused of being behind the
activities of the group without any evidence, invaded Kurutie town,
where my father, Chief Thomas Ekpemupolo, was staying.
"They ransacked the whole building and brutalized him. He
sustained an injury in one of his legs. We took him to Warri for medical
attention after one week of the incident, due to difficulty in movement
from the village to Warri because of the activities of the Army. He
was admitted at Lily Clinic, where thorough medical tests were conducted
on him. The doctors later advised that his lower limb should be
amputated because complication had set in as a result of the injury. We
agreed to this and that was done. However, he later died in the clinic
after two months."
Tompolo described claims by security forces that he has been
sponsoring the dreaded militant group, the Niger Delta Avengers, as "baseless and a wicked allegation." He said, "I
have refuted the allegation. Even the government knows that I am not a
sponsor of the Niger Delta Avengers. They are only looking for something
to nail me."
He took a swipe at Nigeria's judicial system, which he said
kow-tows to the government in purely legal matters. He advocated that
the judiciary should be independent in order to be effective in serving
the people, especially in matters involving "perceived enemies of the state."
Tompolo added, "I was the first person to sue the government
and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) because my
company’s account was restricted unjustly, but till now, the court has
been playing funny, as the court has refused to hear the matter.
Instead, it has been adjourning the case at every sitting. I pray that
the Nigerian Judiciary should be independent, otherwise it is difficult
for a perceived enemy of the government to get justice and judgement."
Tompolo also criticized President Muhammadu Buhari, stating that
the retired Army General does not have a clue about how to manage the
economy of the country, as evidenced by Nigeria's present economic
situation.
"Now Nigerians have seen the way the government has run the
economy aground because they are clueless, and only chasing shadows. It
is difficult to give what you do not have."
He threatened to return to the creeks as a militant because the
Federal Government has failed the people, adding that the only way he
could help his people may be to go back to the creeks and lay among his
people, as he had done in the past.
"That is where I come from, and the whole of my life I have
stayed there. This is just a temporary setback as I prefer to stay in
the creek than any other place.
"That was why I led the struggle for a better living condition
for the people so that, in the shortest possible time, the creek is
urbanized so that the people will live like their counterparts in the
urban areas," Tompolo said.
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