Buhari says Niger Delta situation is complex, seeks dialogue with militants

October 11, 2016 | Government & Regulations, Nigeria, Politics & Social Unrest

Abuja, Nigeria |The Nigerian government and oil companies operating in the country are seeking to make contact with leaders of militant groups in the oil-rich Niger Delta area. President Muhammadu Buhari made the announcement as attacks on oil and gas facilities in the region continue to hinder production and contribute to the ongoing deterioration of the country’s economy.

“Another serious form of insecurity has reared its head in the Niger Delta. The objective is to colonise the country economically by sabotaging oil and gas installations,” Buhari said in a statement, according to Reuters.

“We are trying to speak with their leaders to know how many groups there are.”

Buhari’s comments came as the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) said Nigeria’s current oil production – 1.6m bpd (barrels per day) – was low, partly due to oil theft and vandalism.

Attacks blamed on the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) militant group, which emerged earlier this year, have brought Nigeria’s oil production to a 30-year low. In September, vice-president Yemi Osinbajo claimed the country now loses over one million barrels of crude oil on a daily basis.

As a result, Nigeria is no longer Africa’s biggest oil producer, a title now held by Angola. Earlier this year, South Africa regained the title of Africa’s largest economy, a position held by Nigeria for the past two years.

In August, the government and militant groups in the volatile Delta agreed on a month-long ceasefire. After repeatedly discredited government claims that a ceasefire had been reached, the NDA reportedly agreed to a truce in August. However, the group has since resumed armed attacks.

Militant groups in the oil-rich Niger Delta region took hold in the early 2000s following the deterioration of living conditions blamed on the increase of oil-related activities by foreign corporations. Tensions flared up in local communities as some ethnic groups felt they were being exploited and did not benefit from the crude oil on their land.

The repeated oil spills that considerably damaged the environment and hit people’s health further deepened communities’ frustrations. Militancy in the region accelerated with the execution of Ken Saro Wiwa, the region’s foremost activist and environmental rights campaigner by the late General Sani Abacha regime.