President
Muhammadu Buhari has said the sophistication involved in the blowing up of oil
pipelines in the Niger Delta suggests that those responsible might not be
“ordinary Nigerians”.
According to
him, heading into open waters for almost 70 kilometers to blow up pipelines indicates the involvement of
professionals with such a degree of competency that those in the drilling
industry may have to monitor their members to ensure that professionals are not
deploying their skills as economic saboteurs.
The President
made this observation after his investiture as the Grand Patron of the Nigerian
Academy of Engineering (NAE), conferred by its president, Mrs. Joana Maduka, at
the Presidential Villa.
“How can an
ordinary Nigerian go into the sea, 70 kilometers or more, and blow up oil
installations? That cannot be an ordinary Nigerian. So, I hope you will appeal
to your colleagues to make sure that what we have built, they should safeguard
it, whether they are working with multinationals or the government.”
The President,
disagreeing with the claim that Nigerian engineers were under-utilized, stated
that 90 per cent of refinery builders in the country were indeed Nigerian
engineers.
He added that
the government has always taken engineers seriously in the task of
nation-building.
The President,
regretting the fact that none of the four refineries in the country are
currently in working order, said that the country’s leadership, and not its
engineers, are to blame.
“I think that
if Nigerian engineers are denied their roles, it is not the fault of the
profession, it is the fault of some individual governments. Other governments
have done their best and found Nigerian engineers competent and cost-effective.
Nigerian engineers are very quick in performing in the field”.
The President
added that both military and civilian administrations over the years depended
on Nigerian engineers for design and constructions across the country.
“By insisting
that we must be cost-effective in building infrastructure, we will utilize
Nigerian engineers. I respect them a lot, and I know it takes time to be
trained as an engineer,” he said.
The President
noted that local engineers contributed over 90 percent to the design and
realization of two refineries, 2,500 km of pipelines and 20 depots in the
country during his time as Minister of Petroleum in the mid 70s, adding that
the success of the Petroleum Trust Fund largely hinged on their skills.
“Somehow,
every time and anywhere I have served in this country, we found it cost-effective
to use Nigerian engineers, and we relied on their capacity to understudy, learn
and deliver.
“It will be
wrong to fault Nigerian engineers for the failure of (our) refineries. You
should blame the political leadership. How can you build and not know how to
maintain an asset?” he said.

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