Dr Ahmed Tijani Ramalan, pioneer chairman of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), has disclosed that the agency pays the sum of N1.5bn monthly to former militant leader, Mr. Government Ekpemupolo aka Tompolo.
According to LEADERSHIP, Ramalan said the payment was in exchange for Tompolo's work in protecting the Nigeria's maritime areas.
He said, ''Over 400, 000 barrels of crude oil are being stolen daily from our shores under President Jonathan; yet we had a government that has the Navy, the Army and the Air Force, and the government of Jonathan decides to hand over the security of our maritime waters to Tompolo at a very exorbitant amount of money.
''And these same people that are given the job of our maritime security are the ones that are collaborating with the international shipping companies to steal our oil.
The former NIMASA boss called on President Muhammadu Buhari to cancel the contract awarded to the militant. ''And if Buhari does not do so, we will be the first to start attacking him. There is no basis to give that kind of billion naira job to ex-militants''.
''I was the pioneer chairman of NIMASA, and NIMASA is the one funding the contract given to Tompolo. This is a guy that is collecting about N1.5bn every month and yet our Armed Forces are not well funded. So, we call on the president to discard such contract.
''We supported President Buhari’s presidency because we believe that the country needs a strong leadership. The insecurity and economic problem that we are having in the country today is because of lack of a strong and quality leadership''.
''We believe the country needs a leader that is not corrupt, because the issue of corruption in the country has led the country to its knees. The country would have gone down if the administration of Jonathan was allowed to continue. For us, we believe that having a new leader is what the country needs because of the massive corruption. We believe in President Buhari; we believe there is hope in having him as the president.
NIMASA Pays Former Militant 'Tompolo' N1.5billion Every Year
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