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More than 200 dead in Lagos suburb
Pipeline explosion highlights legacy of imperialism in Nigeria
By Brian Smith
18 May 2006
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The tragic death of more than 200 people in a pipeline explosion
in a suburb of Lagos, Nigeria, is an expression of the desperate
poverty facing the vast majority of the population in this country.
Despite the huge risk involved, tapping holes into fuel linesin
this case carrying gasoline from the port to inland depotsand
siphoning off the fuel into jerry cans is relatively common in
Nigeria.
More burnt corpses are being recovered from the waters around
the pipeline but no injured people have been found. According
to the BBC, local people are reluctant to admit they were connected
with the explosion as in the past even relatives of those involved
have been prosecuted for stealing petroleum.
The tragedy is only the latest of similar events. In 1998 more
than 1,000 were killed in an explosion at the town of Jesse in
the Delta state, and in the following years more than another
1,000 people have died in several incidents in the Delta, in Lagos
and in Abia state.
Exploitation of the countrys oil resources by the West
has not resulted in any amelioration of the desperate poverty
that lies behind these incidents. According to the International
Monetary Funds own figures, during the three decades from
the late 1960s to the late 1990s, oil generated about $350 billion
for Nigeria, whilst the number of Nigerians living in poverty,
i.e., on less than a dollar a day, rose from 36 percent to 70
percent and per capita gross domestic product fell from $1,113
to $1,084 in purchasing power parity terms.
The last few months have seen a dramatic rise in insurgency
in the oil-producing Niger delta region, both contributing to
and taking advantage of the growing world demand for oil. The
upsurge reflects growing anger with the regime of President Olusegun
Obasanjo that has failed to use any of its increased oil revenues
for the benefit of the population. In fact, the government is
using windfall earnings from high oil prices to pay off $12.4
billion in arrears and debts to Western banks.
A new group which has come to the fore is the Movement for
the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), which claims to represent
the Ijaw people, Nigerias fourth-largest ethnic group and
the majority tribe in the delta. It is demanding $1.5 billion
in compensation from Royal Dutch Shell for environmental pollution,
as well as a greater share of government oil revenues.
To achieve our goal of altogether halting oil exports,
we must visit every inch of the delta, says MEND, which
has launched a series of attacks on oil installations using motorboats
armed with machine guns and rocket-propelled grenade launchers.
Since last December it has killed about 20 soldiers and police,
kidnapped several foreign oil workers, who were later released
unharmed, and has shut down a quarter of the countrys 2.4
million barrels per day (bpd) crude oil output. It claims that
it has no desire or interest in abducting for ransom,
but is demanding the total shutdown of all oil production in the
delta and the evacuation of all foreigners. MEND is said to have
widespread support in the local population, and denies it finances
its operations from oil siphoned from the pipelines.
MEND is demanding the release of two prominent Ijaw leaders,
Alliaji Dokubo Asari, head of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer
Force/Salvation Front (NDPVF/SF), and Diepreye Alamieseyeigha,
former governor of the deltas Bayelsa state and ruling Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) member.
Asari is charged with treason over an alleged plot to overthrow
the government, whilst Alamieyeseigha was rearrested after jumping
bail from the UK late last year, where he was held following a
request from the Nigerian regime having been charged with laundering
$13 million in public funds. But many believe that Alamieyeseigha
is being persecuted by the Obasanjo regime since he demanded that
half the revenue from oil should be set aside for the delta states
where it is produced, rather than the allocation of 13 percent
stipulated in the constitution.
MEND is an umbrella for several militias that have been fighting
in the delta for years and according to Africa Confidential
is closely associated with the Federated Niger Delta Ijaw Communities
(FNDIC)Ijaw politicians and businessmen who are opposed
to the Nigerian government on a tribalist basis.
Of all the oil companies in Nigeria, Shell is most exposed
to risk of attack, having dozens of oilfields, over 6,000 km of
pipelines, 87 flow stations, eight gas plants and more than 1,000
wells in the region. More recent entrants, such as Chevron, ExxonMobil,
Total and Italys ENI, have many of their installations located
offshore in the Gulf of Guinea. These installations were previously
seen as secure as they have been less exposed to rebel activity,
though MEND recently kidnapped oil workers from an offshore oilfield.
Shell first discovered oil in the delta in 1958 and its impact
on the local environment has been a source of deep concern and
resentment from the population. There have been numerous oil spills
and also gas flares burning 24 hours a daysome of them for
the last 30 yearswhich emit a deadly poison. Air pollution
from the flares results in acid rain and respiratory problems
in the surrounding community, which has caused in the last year
in Bayelsa state alone 5,000 cases of respiratory diseases and
120,000 asthma attacks, and forced thousands to escape the pollution
by heading for the ghettoes of Port Harcourt and Lagos. In addition,
the villagers have to live with the constant noise of the flare,
and the area is covered in thick soot, which contaminates water
supplies when it rains. Shell pipelines also pass above ground
through villages and over what was once agricultural land.
It is like paradise and hell. They have everything. We
have nothing, complained Eghare Ojhogar, a local chief.
If we protest, they send soldiers. They sign agreements
with us and then ignore us.
The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) has
evacuated hundreds of staff from the western delta and shut down
roughly 455,000 barrels of daily production, about a fifth of
Nigerias total output. A senior Shell security official
said that between 50 and 70 Shell employees had been kidnapped
over the previous year. We have withdrawn staff from the
western delta and will not return until it is safe to do so,
the company said. SPDC, which produces 43 percent of Nigerian
crude, loses 10 percent of its production every day through sabotage
and illegal siphoning, known in Nigeria as bunkering.
Oil companies support the Nigerian armys brutal reprisals
against militias. Chevron Nigeria, the leading US exporter of
Nigerian crude, lent the federal government its terminal at Escravos
and its helicopters, so that government forces could raid communities
hostile to the company. The oil companies also play on local rivalries,
for example, with Chevron making the Itsekris, a rival tribal
grouping to the Ijaws, the main beneficiary of its development
programme.
Many oil facilities are also guarded by Nigerian security forces
known as the spy police, who are regarded by the local
community as mercenaries. They are trained and paid by the oil
companies, who have also increasingly brought in their own security
consultantsex-military from the US, UK and South Africa.
Erinys and Olive Group, which both worked for oil companies in
Iraq, are now active in Nigeria, as are other UK-based security
groups such as Control Risks and Armour Group. These security
forces have proved unable to deal with MENDs attacks.
The Nigerian government is ill-equipped to handle the well-coordinated
operations carried out by MEND in the delta, a vast network of
mangrove creeks and swamps. It is estimated that the country would
need 200 patrol boats to cover the 70,000 sq km of the main delta,
and currently has only a fraction of that. The police are said
to be poorly trained and ill-equipped.
The United States has been reluctant to supply the regime with
more boats, citing the widespread corruption in Nigerias
administration as the reason. Obasanjo was recently supplied with
some patrol boats by China and has increasingly turned to Beijing
for support.
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has recently
approved the acquisition of a 45 percent working interest in a
deep offshore block by China National Offshore Oil Corporation
Limited (CNOOC), which will pay $2.3 billion and will also refund
the $600 million already spent by French firm Total in the development
of the field.
The emergence of China as a factor in African politics has
given Obasanjo a certain amount of room to manoeuvre. Until now
he has been heavily dependent on US support. He is now preparing
to amend the constitution so that he can stand for a third term
as president.
When Obasanjo was first elected in 1999 and Nigeria returned
to civilian rule there were widespread illusions that the inequality
in Nigerian society would be redressed. In fact, poverty has worsened
and the elite continue to enrich themselves at the expense of
the majority of society, while oil wealth pours into the coffers
of the banks and international financial institutions.
See Also:
Four-day general strike
in Nigeria
[22 October 2004]
Nigerian government
launches assault on civilians in Delta region
[4 October 2004]
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