Blood Flows With Oil in Poor Nigerian Villages Print E-mail
Sunday, 01 January 2006

January 1, 2006


OBIOKU, Nigeria - At first glance, it is hard to imagine anyone fighting over this place.

Approached by a creek, the only way to get here, a day's journey by dugout canoe from the nearest town, it presents itself as a collection of battered shacks teetering on a steadily eroding beach.

On Sunday morning, the village children shimmy out of their best clothes after church and head to a muddy puddle to collect water. Their mothers use the murky liquid to cook whatever soup they can muster from the meager catch of the day.

Poor Villages Become Oil Battleground

A woman from Odioma and her sick child traveled to a distant town for care because Odioma has no medical facilities. The area is oil rich but both villages are poor.

Yet for months a pitched battle has been fought between communities that claim authority over this village and the right to control what lies beneath its watery ground: a potentially vast field of crude oil that has caught the attention of a major energy company.

The conflict has left dozens dead and wounded, sent hundreds fleeing their homes and roiled this once quiet part of the Niger Delta. It has also laid bare the desperate struggle of impoverished communities to reap crumbs from the lavish banquet the oil boom has laid in this oil-rich yet grindingly poor corner of the globe.

"This region is synonymous with oil, but also with unbelievable poverty," said Anyakwee Nsirimovu, executive director of Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law in the Niger Delta. That combination is an inevitable recipe for bloodshed and misery, he said. "The world depends on their oil, but for the people of the Niger Delta oil is more of a curse than a blessing."

Africa is in the midst of an oil boom, with companies and governments pouring $50 billion into projects that may double the continent's oil output in the next decade.

In the world's thirst for oil and the United States' efforts to obtain it outside the troubled Middle East, African oil has become essential. Africa is expected to provide the United States with a quarter of its oil supply in the next decade, compared with about 15 percent now, and much of it will come from the Gulf of Guinea, where the Niger Delta sits.

Poor Villages Become Oil Battleground

Odioma, a Nigerian village, was damaged by the army last year in a dispute over oil rights, residents said.

But much of that oil will come from places like Obioku, and with it a tangled and often bloody web of conflict marked by poverty and a near abdication of responsibility by government.

Even though Nigeria elected a democratic government in 1999, which raised hopes for the long-suffering delta region, almost none of the enormous wealth the oil creates reaches places like this. The isolation of Obioku is total. With no fast boats available, the nearest health center or clinic is a day's journey away. No telephone service exists here. Radio brings the only news of the world outside. Nothing hints that the people here live in a nation enjoying the profits of record-high oil prices.

"It is like we don't exist, as far as government is concerned," said Worikuma Idaulambo, chairman of Obioku's council of chiefs.

Nigeria is a longstanding OPEC member that exported nearly $30 billion of oil in 2004, the United States Department of Energy said. Nigeria sends 13 percent of revenues from its states back, a hefty sum for the underdeveloped ones where oil is produced. Much of that is siphoned off by corrupt regional officials who often pocket the money or waste it on lavish projects that do little, if anything, for ordinary people.

A result has been a violent struggle over the jobs, schools and other aid that oil companies have offered to encourage local residents to cooperate. Here in Obioku, as in many towns in the delta, an oil company, in this case a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell, has brought the only signs of modernity. In 1998, Shell bought the rights to drill for oil near a small fishing settlement at the edge of Obioku, no more than a handful of rough shelters made of grass and wood.

Shell signed agreements with the chiefs of Obioku and with leaders in the nearest town, Nembe-Bassambiri, to help develop Obioku. In time, Shell built a water tower, gave the village a generator and built a primary school. In return, the village agreed to allow Shell and its contractors to work freely.

For years Shell did nothing with the field. Then, early last year, a Shell contractor arrived to begin work, and trouble started.

Officials in a nearby town, Odioma, laid claim to the land, and demanded that the oil company pay tribute if it wanted to drill.

"This is Odioma land," said Daniel I. L. Orumiegha-Bari, a member of Odioma's council of chiefs. "It belongs to us. Anyone claiming otherwise is an interloper wanting to revise hundreds of years of our history."

Chiefs in Nembe-Bassambiri, who were receiving payments on the premise that the land was theirs, rejected Odioma's claim.

Human rights and environmental groups have long criticized the practices of Shell, the oldest and largest of Nigeria's oil producers. As a result of a stinging internal report in 2003 that said Shell, whether intentionally or not, "creates, feeds into or exacerbates conflict," the company revamped its community relations strategy. Shell immediately withdrew from the Obioku area and referred the dispute to local government authorities to resolve.

In this serpentine labyrinth of rivers and creeks, where fishermen eke out a living casting homemade nets, who owned Obioku was academic to the chiefs of Odioma and Nembe-Bassambiri until Shell arrived. But with the sudden promise of payment, the dispute escalated, first in increasingly belligerent letters among the three villages.

Words soon gave way to action, and blood began to flow into the rivers and creeks. In February, a boat filled with local government councilors on a mission to broker a deal among the feuding communities was attacked, and a dozen people were killed.

Officials in Nembe-Bassambiri blamed a militant youth group in Odioma for the slaughter. The group is believed to be involved in bunkering: stealing oil by breaking into pipelines.

As is common here, group members had been hired by an oil company contractor to provide security on the waterways, chiefs in Odioma and other villages said. Such contracts are often a way to buy cooperation from youths who would otherwise attack oil installations and harass workers.

Contending that it sought to arrest the members of the youth group, a unit of the Nigerian military known as the Joint Task Force, charged with security in the Niger Delta, went to Odioma on Feb. 19.

Thinking that the task force was coming to help them, Odioma's chiefs had gathered in the village king's palace to receive it. But shots were fired, and the chiefs scattered.

"We thought they came in peace," said Mr. Orumiegha-Bari, the Odioma chief. "But they destroyed our village."

The army flattened Odioma, residents said, leaving behind a barren moonscape covered with a carpet of ash, broken glass and burned concrete where an idyllic village once stood. At least 17 people died in the raid, including a 12-year-old boy called Lucky, Mr. Orumiegha-Bari said.

Ayebatari Silgbanibo had been sitting in the tiny office of his computer business, which he started with a grant from Shell, when the gunfire started. "I didn't want to leave my computer because it is all I have," Mr. Silgbanibo, 22, said. "But I was afraid."

When he returned, his computer and printer had been destroyed. He is a fisherman now, like his father and most of the men in this village, earning about a dollar a day. The computer, which he received because Odioma has its own oil wells, apart from Obioku, was supposed to lift him out of generations of poverty.

"How can I ever buy a new computer?" he said. "It is impossible."

Brig. Gen. Elias Zamani, commander of the Joint Task Force, said his soldiers opened fire on Odioma only after being fired upon. "They were lying in wait for the arrival of our troops," he said of the youth group.

He said some houses had been destroyed when stray bullets struck buildings where petroleum was stored. The army disputes the death toll, saying army officials asked to see bodies and graves and could not find any. But a report on the attack by Amnesty International in November concluded that the destruction seemed to have had specific targets, destroying the houses of the village king and other officials.

And yet, Mr. Orumiegha-Bari said he was grateful that it was the Joint Task Force that had attacked his village and not their neighbors in Nembe-Bassambiri.

"If Bassambiri people came first you wouldn't have seen anybody here to talk to," the chief said. "They would have slaughtered every last man."

The village has asked the army to stay to protect residents from their neighbors.

"We don't like that they are here, but it is better that they stay," Mr. Orumiegha-Bari said. The arrival of the soldiers, village leaders said, is the first time any federal government representative has had a presence in Odioma.

It is hard to say who is to blame for the violence that has wracked this pocket of Nigeria. Some villagers and human rights groups blame the oil companies and their contractors, which pay for economic development and employ youths, creating an incentive for communal violence. Still others blame the federal, state and local governments, which collect and distribute millions of dollars in the names of local residents yet never seem to produce much benefit.

"These conflicts are a direct result of the abandonment of these communities by their government," Mr. Nsirimovu said. "If their government took care of them they wouldn't be fighting over these little scraps and rewards from the oil companies."

Federal officials acknowledge that corruption is a big problem but point out that even if Nigeria is having an oil boom, it does not amount to great wealth per capita. In 2004, after costs were deducted, Nigeria's oil money amounted about 50 cents per day for each of the country's 130 million people, they said.

Shell officials defended their role in the crisis, saying they withdrew from the area as soon as a conflict over ownership arose. They said it was primarily the job of Nigeria's elected officials to develop the country, but added that in addition to taxes and royalties, they contributed 3 percent of their annual operating budget to a fund to help develop the delta. In 2004, the company's contribution to that fund was nearly $70 million.

"Government is so removed that they see the oil companies as being the nearest government to them," said Don S. Bonham, a spokesman for Shell in the oil capital of Port Harcourt. "The expectations of government have not been met."

The communities fighting over the oil fields are in Bayelsa State, which produces a third of Nigeria's oil and has an annual budget of more than half a billion dollars to spend on its three million people. But most of it goes to white elephants like a mansion for the governor and his deputy.

"This is what we eat," said Paulgba Tekikuma, an Obioku resident, gesturing to a small bowl half-full of tiny fish and crustaceans she would mix with milled cassava. "The water, sometimes it get the babies sick when they drink. But we no get any other."

Corruption is largely to blame. The state's governor, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, was arrested in London on money laundering charges in September, then fled to Nigeria, where he enjoyed immunity even from prosecutors, in November. He is suspected of stealing hundreds of millions of dollars from the state since he was elected in 1999. He has since been impeached, and as a result charged with corruption and money laundering in Nigeria. After an inquiry in 2005, Amnesty International concluded, "As with many violent disputes within communities in the Niger Delta, access to oil resources is at the root of the Odioma incident."

Mr. Nsirimovu, the human rights advocate, said the underdevelopment of the region both caused and exacerbated the violence. Until real development begins, "blood will flow freely in the Niger Delta," he said. "Mark my words."




RobotRobot is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 1

January 1, 2006OBIOKU, Nigeria - At first glance, it is hard to imagine anyone fighting over this place.Approached by a creek, the only way to get here, a day's journey by dugout canoe from the nearest town, it presents itself as a collection of battered shacks teetering on a steadily eroding beach. On Sunday morning, the village children shimmy out of their best clothes after church and head to a muddy puddle to collect water. Their mothers use the murky liquid to cook whatever soup they can muster from the mea...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 01.01.2006 21:05

Reply Quote



NonyellumNonyellum is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 2

Grieves my heart; creeps, predators and vultures everywhere.

To add insult to injury, OBJoke sends a Northern blood-thirsty Army General to kill Niger Deltans.

Your blood will not be in vain. Those creeps we have for leaders will give an account, some day. Only a handful, if any, deserve to be spared the JR treatment.

What evil leaders, from top to bottom. If the head is rotten.............

Posted by Nonyellum| 01.01.2006 21:59

Reply Quote



Naija for lifeNaija for life is online 

avatar
 # 3

To add to Noyellum's comment above, why don't all the cult members of the Obasanjo supporters' cult explain to us why he is so deathly afraid of Northerners? The slightest agitation is all it takes for this cowardly derelict to dispatch troops to destroy a village in the Niger Delta. However, he will advance all kinds of specious reasons for not employing the army to quash blatant violations of the constitution by northerners

What about sharia? Oh, they are entltled to the adoption of religion as a basis for the administration of their civic affairs, the wretch will say.

What about the attacks of Christians in Jos? The situation did not merit military intervention, he'd say.

What about the attacks of Igbo traders and other southerners in response to the simple inadvertent act of backing over a copy of a koran with a car? Oh, the situation did not warrant military intervention, the gorilla face would say.

Then, pray tell, precisely what was so prejudicial to national security about the murder of twelve policemen that you had to rejoin it by dispatching a contingent of your murderous goons to obliterate the village of Odi?

Pray tell, when are you going to bring Babangida to book?

And TO ALL SOUTHERNERS, when are we going to divest ourselves of this yolk of Northern hegemony? When are we going to purge ourselves of these socially and intellectually regressive Neanderthals, whose value systems represent nothing but a potent retardant on our progress?

When are we going to evict these UnNigerian parasites who iddentify more with Arabs than Negroes, who only maintain a feigned allegiance to the Nigerian nation because of our oil resources, and whose all consuming motivation is the suckling of a debased, misogynistic and retrograde practise called sharia?

Expel them from the Nigerian nation, I say, and render unto Gideon Orkar and his fellow patriots their long deserved beautifications. Expel these illiterate, anti-intellectual, cattle rearing, Arab loving, purdah maintaining, twelve-year-old-marrying-asses from our hallowed land. Yeah, let them take up with their Arab "brothers" that they venerate so much, and that they happily interact in servility to.

Let them, so that the Arabs can rape the hausa women to extirpate their negroid features, because they "look like dogs", and murder their husbands. Let them, so that the Arabs, this demonic and degenerate race of people, these remorseless enslavers of negroes, can give them Darfur, the sequel.

I am a Delta native, and I am raging mad over this latest descent down our beautiful waters, so mesmerising in their labyrinthine network of inumerable tributaries. So I'd like to send a message to Obasanjo: Stand up for southern Nigeria or **** off!

Posted by Naija for life| 02.01.2006 08:09

Reply Quote



NonyellumNonyellum is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 4

I love the water, it's so beautiful, it beckons you.

The Bible says, to whom much is given, much is required. And that He will not allow you to go through more than you can bear, but will with the temptation, also make a way of escape. I wish I could make things right, now. Make Nigeria a just and equitable society where true Federalism is practiced, the majority tribes do not subjugate the minorities, where democratic principles prevail. Your blood is too preciuos, your children are precious, you are precious.

The tripodal conspiracy of the 3 majority tribes, Hausa/Igbo/Yoruba hegemony, is NOT completely dead yet. Some of SS's eminent sons at Federal, State and Local levels are aslo involved, they have betrayed us. They are NOT for us, but their belies. They've pitched tent with the enemy. Don't look to them for help, they're part of the problem. So I say, to your tents oh Israel. It's the peoples' fight.

Why would Ibori, any SS Gov let loose a bloodthirsty maniac like that Zamani guy on his people at the slightest provocation? - unless they've sold their souls to the centre. Zamani is a killer, I can almost feel his delight, he's empowered to kill those he sees as a nuisance to the current "arrangement" that enriches them, degrades our land, impoverishes and disinherits us. Our Govs allow this time and again. Shame on them.

There is a way out of this contraption. God said it, and it'll all work beautifully once we arrive at the right course. It is so important that we not loose hope despite the seeming odds. Everyone is important. God can use anyone, especially those without strength, to perform feats, and shame the wise / strong. Goliath was kiled by little David; there's Esther, Gideon, Jepthae, the Church in Smyrna - the little saint's church that could. There is a way. And it is fast approaching.

Posted by Nonyellum| 02.01.2006 21:43

Reply Quote



VisitorVisitor is online 

avatar
 # 5

Noyellum,

What is happening in the Niger Delta is a crime against humanity, but you should not use these despicable incidents to instigate a Holy war against the predominantly Moslem North, we should all learn to coexist in the state of Nigeria that was created by our fromer Christian colonisers.
Comments such as yours only fuel the religious divide that exists in Nigeria, and while it has been shown that the Arabs were the original enslavers of the Nubian races, you cannot ignore the contribution Christianity played in the development of the slave trade, a far greater crime on us than anything the arabs can ever be accused of.
On the subject of Xtianity and the West we must not forget that it was indeed the Christian nations of the west that divided Africa up amongst themselves for their own wicked divide and rule means, the western Xtian Oil companies must also shoulder some of the blame for our presnt day predicament and yet you quote the bible with so much fervour.
The sooner we wake up and rid ourselves of the shackles of religion the better, afterall what has it done for us in Nigeria, we are the most outwardly religious nation of the world and yet we are one of the most morally depraved and wretched nations on earth.
We need to wake up and rid ourselves of the shackles of Religion as given to us by the Xtian West and go back to our traditional values of brotherhood and integrity, only then will we progress.
I believe John Major once called it going back to basics, it is our quest for all things Xtian and western that has landed us in **** not Islam.

Posted by Visitor| 03.01.2006 17:54

Reply Quote



VisitorVisitor is online 

avatar
 # 6

The above post also refers to Naija for lifes comments

Posted by Visitor| 03.01.2006 17:58

Reply Quote



NonyellumNonyellum is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 7


=Visitor>Noyellum,

What is happening in the Niger Delta is a crime against humanity,

Noyellum: You got that right!

but you should not use these despicable incidents to instigate a Holy war against the predominantly Moslem North,

Noyellum: Did you read that in my post?

we should all learn to coexist in the state of Nigeria that was created by our fromer Christian colonisers.

Noyellum: Take a good look in the mirror when you read this, I'm assuming you're Northern and muslim.



No more distractions please!

Posted by Nonyellum| 03.01.2006 18:57

Reply Quote



VisitorVisitor is online 

avatar
 # 8

That is why I referred to Naija 4 life I suggest you also read my posts, my point is that your posts appear to complement each other based on what I feel is a misguided adherence to the religion of our enslavers, colonisers and oppressors worldwide, we should all wake up and seek the truth about our existence, we should all go back to the core values of our ancestors.
And by the way my good man I am from one end of the south, brought up and educated at the other end of the south, only ever stepped on Northern soil en route to Kenya in the early 80's in fact never even been to Abuja yet, also the Grandson of a 'poor' Baptist Minister.

Posted by Visitor| 03.01.2006 19:12

Reply Quote



AhamefulaAhamefula is online 

avatar
 # 9

Bloodthirsty Zamani was sent to slaughter my people. Obasanjo's administration and his crnonies days are numbered. Stop the killing today; Obasanjo, stop the genocide now!

Obasanjo, you find pleasures to slaughter the defenseless people of Odioma - in Obioku Delta State so shall your state be and slaughter shall be your portion when your time come. Not too long!

Zamani is northern or is northern name. I thought northerners learned from the civil war; i thought they learned that our people cannot walkaway without fighting back. ... And, Obasanjo can not in his thickest moments sent a southern to do his dirty job as they will resist or resign such positionship. I can feel the pain these humble villagers; and I can feel and see the litttle chap carrying water from a dirty pond; as i see him my heart bleeds in tears and refused to be consoled, obviously. I wonder why Obasanjo did this but cannot see it as criminal when the northerns kills Xtian southerns in Jos, Kaduna, Kano and elsewhere at his watch. It is getting closer that we team together to defend the defenseless people of Nigeria or to your tents oh Israel. Noyellum and others I join you in preparation the final battle for it is coming sooner or later. God knows, when all these will assuredly settle down for peace to return to our/my people and good peoples of the world that cherish peace and co-existence. I will love to live in peace with my neighbors who want to live in peace with me and my people. But behold, it seems impossible these days. Resource control and resource domiinance by west and takover of our land is ubuiquitious everywhere these days.

Let my people go; let the prisoners go free ... Sometimes i wonder what am doing in this far land while my people perish, depraved and poverished. It is a question of time.

It shall come to past ...

Shallom -

Ahamefula

Posted by Ahamefula| 03.01.2006 20:16

Reply Quote



NonyellumNonyellum is offline 
Villager

avatar
 # 10

Culled from BUSINESSDAY, January 3rd, 2006


Army detains Ijaw leader as wife alleges frame-up

Barely a month after he raised alarm over shady deals allegedly perpetrated by military personnel in the Niger Delta region, Ijaw youth activist and multi-millionaire businessman, Collins Eselemo, was arrested Friday in Warri, Delta State.

Eselemo, an advocate of self-determination for the Niger-Delta region, was allegedly invited to the army barracks in Efffurun, near Warri, and detained following the arrest of one of his tenants at the Eselemo Plaza along Warri- Sapele Road in the metropolis.

Sources at Defence Headquarters, Abuja said that Eselemo was being detained on suspicion of aiding and abetting his tenant who allegedly exchanged fake naira notes for genuine ones on commission.

But in a reaction, wife of the detained activist, Patience, dismissed the allegation as "mischievous and a well orchestrated plot to cage my husband".

She recalled that a few weeks ago, Eselemo had raised alarm over threats to his life, claiming that a team of armed soldiers and mobile policemen laid siege at his residence in Warri, ostensibly on the orders of Elias Zamani, a Brigadier-General and the Commander of the Joint Military Task Force in the Niger Delta area, over an alleged land dispute with his neighbour.

The military invasion, she said, followed a press conference addressed by her husband on the alleged involvement of Zamani, in some shady deals including illegal bunkering.
Zamani has since denied the allegation, saying he was not involved in any act of economic sabotage in whatever form.

Patience contended that the circumstances surrounding the arrest and detention of her husband "smacks of a frame-up organized by Zamani to settle scores with my husband".

Consequently, she urged the chief of army staff, Martins Luther Agwai, to urgently look in the mater and order his immediate transfer to the Nigeria police for thorough investigation of the allegation against him, alternatively, she wants her husband released unconditionally from military detention.

Expressing concern over the deteriorating health of her husband, who she said, suffers an acute ailment in urgent need for surgery, she lamented that her husband has been denied bail and medical attention despite recommendation by an Army Medical Doctor at the Effurun barracks that the Ijaw leader needs to undergo urgent surgery.

The wife said it is sad that her husband who is a successful businessman and Environmental Rights activist is being detained over a frivolous suspicion that he had knowledge of one of his tenant’s involvement in fake naira deals.

‘’ Ironically ,it is just a mere sun of N 10,000.00 fake naira notes that was allegedly recovered from my husband’s tenant whom about three soldiers were beating when my husband arrived the scene in front of Eselemo Plaza, his business complex in Warri and he was arrested for intervening and wanting to know what was happening within his premises .

’When the soldiers sent by General Zamani invaded our residence a few week back shooting sporadically as they took over our house, my husband petitioned the authorities and some soldiers, were arrested.

"Where are those soldiers? What has come out of investigations into that case by the military? Now, they are detaining my husband for no just cause and want him dead in cell. If he has any case to answer, they should hand him over to the police for investigations of the allegation or release him immediately", the statement reads in part.




I've come across so many atrocities committed by Army General Zamani, especially in Delta. Now I know the reason he's so trigger happy, harrassing, killing a lot of us and getting away with it. He's the protection for Govt sanctioned illegal bunkering. The man is running riot in SS. This has got to stop.

Posted by Nonyellum| 03.01.2006 22:27

Reply Quote


Last Updated ( Wednesday, 23 April 2008 )
 

Services : E-mail news | RSS Feeds | Podcasts
Links:   About the NVS | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies | Advertise With Us
All Rights Reserved. NigeriaVillageSquare.com