Nigeria’s major trunk line, the
Forcados terminal crude oil export pipeline, in Burutu Local Government Area of
Delta State, has been blown up by new Niger Delta militants under
the aegis of
the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA).
The group, in a statement on its
website, claimed responsibility for the incident which occurred last Saturday
night.
The attack on the terminal has led
to an acute shortage of crude oil both for export and for local processing.
The Forcados terminal accounts
for over 400,000 barrels of crude oil exported daily and are ranked among the
biggest terminals in the country.
The attack came a few days after
President Muhammadu Buhari issued an order that more troops should be deployed
to the Niger Delta region to protect oil installations.
In the statement, NDA said it enjoys
support from Northern, Western and Eastern parts of the country.
The group, in the statement titled:
“Operation Red Economy,” said its move was to protest the federal Government’s
inability to tackle critical national issues including the anti-corruption war.
An official of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), who spoke under the condition of anonymity,
disclosed that a high-powered delegation has been dispatched from Abuja to
carry out an on-the-spot assessment on the affected installations.
Lt. Col. Isa Ado, the spokesman of
the Joint Task Force codenamed Operation Pulo Shield, did not pick calls on his
phone for confirmation of the incident. A senior military officer however
confirmed the attack.
The Media Relations Manager of
Shell, Mr. Precious Okolobo, in an email response to enquiries, said: “SPDC is
investigating the source of a crude oil spill which was observed on water
around Forcados Terminal on Sunday (February 14). This initial investigation
will enable the company to quickly determine what suitable response is further
needed.”
Among its 11 demands for peace in
the region, NDA demanded for the immediate implementation of the report of the
2014 National Conference organised by former President Goodluck Jonathan.
The group also demanded the
immediate release of the detained leader of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra
(IPOB), Mr. Nnamdi Kanu, as directed by the courts.
It said: “We are a group of young
Niger Deltans who have support from other parts of Nigeria, namely Northern,
Western and Eastern parts.
“We have watched with keen interest,
the way and manner in which the President Muhammadu Buhari-led APC government
runs the affairs of this country, and we are not pleased with the way things
are going.
“For instance, the so-called anti-corruption
fight is directed at perceived enemies of the government, and those who are
sympathetic to former President Goodluck Jonathan. We wonder why these
persecutions, despite the peaceful manner Jonathan handed power over to the All
Progressives Congress.”
“So far, the only two governorship
elections that were conducted under this government were and still remain the
most controversial elections in the history of this nation,” it said.
The group further demanded that:
“The ownership of oil blocks must reflect 60 percent for the oil-producing
people and 40% for the non-oil producing people. The only Nigerian Maritime
University sited in the most appropriate and befitting place in Okerenkoko must
start the 2015/2016 academic session, immediately.
“The Minister of Transportation, Mr.
Rotimi Amaechi, should apologise to the Ijaws and the entire Niger Delta people
for his careless and reckless statements about the siting of the University.
“The Ogoniland and indeed, all oil
polluted lands in the Niger Delta must be cleaned up and compensation be paid
to all oil-producing communities”.
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