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: Nigeria
Nigerian president sends troops to restart flow of oil
By Trevor Johnson
3 April 2003
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The major oil companies Shell, ChevronTexaco and TotalFinaElf
have all closed facilities and evacuated staff from the Niger
Delta in the last few weeks. As a result Nigerias usual
oil output of 2 million barrels a day is down by 40 percent.
This cut in production has had a significant effect on the
price of oil because Nigeria is the worlds sixth biggest
exporter and the United States fifth largest oil supplier.
The situation has come as a blow to the Bush administration,
which was counting on West African oil while its war in the Middle
East disrupted supplies. In an attempt to put pressure on President
Obasanjo to get the Delta region firmly under control the US has
halted its military aid to Nigeria.
Without US backing it is unlikely that Obasanjo can retain
control of his army. He has responded swiftly to the US ultimatum
by sending 3,000 troops into the Delta. Reports are filtering
out of army massacres and whole villages being destroyed.
The oil companies say that escalating communal violence has
made it impossible for them to maintain production. Such violence,
as well as attacks on oil workers, has been common for many years.
But the latest incidents have been on a far greater scale than
in the past.
Youths from the Ijaw community are said to have obtained automatic
weapons, explosives and rocket-propelled grenades. If this is
true it suggests that powerful figures within the Nigerian elite
are backing them financially.
The web site Stratfor.com warned in March, Something
big is going on in Nigeria, and suggested that the oil-rich
Delta region could be about to erupt into war.
Obasanjo hopes to use the army to stamp out all opposition
in the area. If he loses control of the Delta his usefulness to
the US and the oil companies will be spent and he will lose political
power in the rest of the country.
Communal violence has increased throughout Nigeria in the run-up
to the presidential election in April. Every candidate in the
election is a former general and the rivalry between them centres
on who will gain control over Nigerias oil wealth.
None of them have any policies to address the staggering levels
of poverty. Nigeria is the largest oil producer in Africa, but
the majority of the population live on less than a dollar a day.
Instead the presidential candidates whip up ethnic and religious
tensions, setting one impoverished group against another.
The main communal conflict in the Delta region is between the
Ijaw and Itsekiri, who both live in poverty amid the pollution
caused by the oil companies. There have been conflicts between
these groups before, but in recent months they had been collaborating
in protests directed against the oil companies.
In January women from both the Ijaw and the Itsekiri communities
blockaded waterways to prevent naval gunboats from passing. When
they occupied a Chevron export terminal the company had to promise
them regular jobs, schools, town halls, electricity and drinking
water.
Since then, however, the two communities have become bitterly
divided. Gangs of Ijaw youths have attacked Itsekiri villages,
burning houses and killing scores of people. Ijaw spokesmen claim
that new electoral boundaries favour the Itsekiri and that the
oil companies have given them preferential treatment.
Ijaw militants have seized 11 oil pipeline stations and have
threatened to blow them up unless the government redraws the electoral
boundaries. The government has responded by sending more troops
and gunboats into the Delta. There are reports of attacks by government
forces and Itsekiri militants on Ijaw villages.
Refugees from Ijaw villages say the armed forces have put them
under a state of siege, using both navy gunboats and soldiers.
The navy is said to have imposed a 24-hour curfew to stop all
movement in the areas they control.
Danka Pueba, an activist of the Niger Delta Human and Environmental
Rescue Organisation, told the AFP news service that 53 members
of the Ijaw community had been killed by the troops. An Ijaw youth
leader, who fled 40 kilometres from his home to escape the violence,
told the BBC that soldiers had burnt down several Ijaw villages
in unprovoked attacks. The army yesterday and today has
been massacring our people. About four villages have been burnt
down, he said.
Thousands of refugees from both communities have fled into
the swamp region south of the town of Warri. One described soldiers
firing horizontally and torching homes and shops.
She told reporters that she saw many people fall: I didnt
stay to see if they were dead or alive.
This escalation in violence follows the murder last month of
Dr. Marshall Harry, national vice chairman of the All Nigeria
Peoples Party (ANPP). Harry was running the campaign of the ANPP
presidential candidate, former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari.
Buhari stood a good chance of gaining control of the economically
vital Delta region where Harry had his power base.
The murder has served as a signal for a descent into a spiral
of ethnic violence that has cut across any common social movement
that might have united all the different ethnic groups in the
Delta against the oil companies. The ethnic violence has given
Obasanjo the opportunity to mount a major military crackdown in
the region. But in doing so he has ensured only greater political
instability that will make the position of the oil companies increasingly
difficult.
See Also:
Violence increases as Nigerian
elections approach
[20 March 2003]
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