Nigeria’s
President Muhammadu Buhari needs to address grievances in the Delta region
where militants have been blowing up oil pipelines in a conflict that has
become a “major concern”, a senior British official said yesterday. The swamps
of the southern Delta have been hit by a series of attacks on pipelines and
other oil and gas facilities that have reduced Nigeria’s output by 300,000
barrels a day, closed a major export port and two refineries. MILITANTS-buhari
Nigeria has moved in army reinforcements to hunt the militants but British
Foreign Minister Philip Hammond said Buhari needed to the deal with the root
causes because a military confrontation could end in “disaster”. Crude sales
from the Delta account for 70 percent of national income in Africa’s biggest economy
but residents, some of whom sympathise with the militants, have long complained
of poverty. “It’s obviously a major concern,” Hammond told reporters on the
sidelines of a regional security conference in Abuja when asked about the Delta
situation. “The idea that your answer is by moving big chunks of the Nigerian
army to the Delta simply doesn’t work,” he said, adding that the army did not
have the capacity while fighting Boko Haram jihadists in the north. “It won’t
deal with the underlying issues.” “Buhari has got to show as a president from
the north that he is not ignoring the Delta, that he is engaging with the
challenges in the Delta,” Hammond said. Buhari is a Muslim from the north who
has not visited the Christian Delta since taking office a year ago, something
highlighted by a militant group, the Niger Delta Avengers, which has claimed a
string of attacks on pipelines. The group has warned oil firms to leave the
region within two weeks and says it is fighting for independence for the Delta.
It has said it wanted a greater share of oil revenues and an end to oil
pollution. The attacks have driven Nigerian oil output to near a 22-year low
and, if the violence escalates into another insurgency, it could cripple output
in a country facing a growing economic crisis. Buhari, who has not commented
about not visiting the Delta, has extended a multi-million dollar amnesty
signed with militants in 2009 but upset them by ending generous pipeline
protection contracts. He also cut the amnesty budget by around 70 percent,
which partly funds training for unemployed.
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