Source: THISDAY LIVE
The Nigerian federal government is trying to talk
its way out of an unfolding crisis in its oil-producing Niger Delta
region, but activists and traditional leaders are divided over whether
negotiation is the best solution.
The Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr.
Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, said the government wants to work with the Niger
Delta Avengers (NDA), a militant group whose months of attacks on oil
pipelines succeeded in reducing Nigeria’s oil production by as much as
50 per cent.
It is unclear if talks have already begun. An official at the
state-owned oil company told the Voice of America (VOA) last week that
the government and the Avengers had agreed to a ceasefire, a position
the group denied on Twitter.
In the Niger Delta’s towns and cities, some activists are wondering if brokering peace with the militants is a good idea.
“Anybody from anywhere can just pick [up an] AK-47, create hell with the pipelines and expect the federal government to come and negotiate with them,” said Anyakwee Nsirimovu of the Port Harcourt-based Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. “That would be anarchy.”
“Anybody from anywhere can just pick [up an] AK-47, create hell with the pipelines and expect the federal government to come and negotiate with them,” said Anyakwee Nsirimovu of the Port Harcourt-based Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law. “That would be anarchy.”
Previous Nigerian governments have
negotiated with militants in the region. An earlier insurgency was
quelled in 2009 when former President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua convinced
militants to surrender their guns in exchange for an amnesty programme
that provided monthly cash payments and job training.
The Avengers’ attacks on oil pipelines started earlier this year and
sharply reduced Nigeria’s daily production of around two million barrels
per day.
The decision to seek talks with the
Avengers was a wise one, said Godspower Gbenekama, a member of the
traditional ruling council in the Gbaramatu Kingdom, which was the site
of several pipeline attacks claimed by the Avengers.
“Military solution is never a solution
and can never be a solution. Dialogue is the only way forward,” he said,
adding that Avenger attacks and military reprisal and raids have led to
oil spills in Gbaramatu.
But by engaging the Avengers in talks, attorney and human rights activist Oghenejabor Ikimi said that will encourage other militant groups to take up arms just to get the government’s attention.
But by engaging the Avengers in talks, attorney and human rights activist Oghenejabor Ikimi said that will encourage other militant groups to take up arms just to get the government’s attention.
“If not because I’m a lawyer, if I were
living in the creeks, I would just form my own [group] too, so the
government could just come and dialogue with me,” Ikimi said. “But
there’s no sense in all this.”
President Muhammadu Buhari is winding down the amnesty programme, which was supposed to buy time for the government to develop the Niger Delta.
President Muhammadu Buhari is winding down the amnesty programme, which was supposed to buy time for the government to develop the Niger Delta.
Despite being the source of Nigeria’s
considerable oil wealth, the region is as impoverished as any other part
of the country, with bad roads and unreliable electricity.
If the government wants to end militancy once and for all, Gbenekama said, it needs to keep its promise of developing the delta.
If the government wants to end militancy once and for all, Gbenekama said, it needs to keep its promise of developing the delta.
“These are aggrieved Niger Delta
people,” he said. “Immediately [after] the issues of the Niger Delta are
addressed, these criminal activities will end.”
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