Showing posts with label security. Show all posts
Showing posts with label security. Show all posts

Monday, July 30, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 300707


Armed Robbery Suspects Gunned Down (The Tide)

The police in Rivers State have killed three suspected armed robbers during an exchange of fire along Rumuigbo Road, old GRA, Port Harcourt.

The men of the underworld met their waterloo when the police getting information that a gang of armed robbers are operating in the area and they immediately swoop into action.

A source said that as the police Anti-crime Patrol team was mobilized to the scene, the robbers on sighting them, opened fire and in the process exchange of fire ensued.

It was learnt that during the exchange of fire, the three armed robber suspects were gunned down and others took to their heels and escaped.

The source further said the police have intensified efforts to track down the fleeing suspects and bring them to face the full wrath of the law.

The police public Relations Officer of the state Police Command, Ireju Barasua, a Deputy Superintendent of police (DSP) who confirmed the incident however called on the public to always assist the police with timely information on criminal activities, as to enable the police move into action.


Another Missing Ship (Nigerian Tribune)

CURIOUSLY, it seems that Nigeria’s reputation for the proliferation of absurdities is on a steady rise. Now, it is commonplace for ships arrested for one crime or the other to literally disappear from the custody of those keeping them as if they were some small items that could be pilfered by a common pickpocket!

ABOUT two months ago, two ships, MT Balle and MT Alruhula, were used to transport crude oil that was fraudulently obtained. The officers and crew of the ships were arrested by some “overzealous” naval men in the Calabar area and the ships were steered to Port Harcourt. The ships were then officially delivered to the officers of the NNS Pathfinder at their base in Port Harcourt.

BUT rather than moor the ships, the officers of the Pathfinder found a path for the ships to escape and the naval authorities tried to cover up the scandal until a group called Nigerian Youths for Good Governance made allegations against the Nigerian Navy establishment and when the press asked the Navy to react to these allegations, they issued a statement on the matter.

ITS Director of Information, Captain Obiora Medani, said it was true as stated by the Nigerian Youths for Good Governance that two ships detained at the Port Harcourt base had disappeared but that the naval authorities had not tried to conceal the matter and that a board of inquiry headed by a Captain Bimbo Ayuba would determine if the crude found on the ships was illegally obtained and whether the NNS Kyanwa had a good reason to arrest the two ships.

IT is pertinent to recall that many high ranking naval officers were retired following the disappearance of MT African Pride because, according to the Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ganiyu Adekeye, the officers had criminal connection with crude oil. As we asked in our Editorial of June 28, 2007, from where the foregoing is copiously quoted, “Is retirement a retribution for these Mephistophelian atrocities? Is retirement alone enough deterrent to others who might have discovered a greater reward in this criminality than in continued stay in service?”

CAPTAIN Medani, however, after our editorial on the Navy and the missing ships, had made allegations in the newspapers about a smear campaign in the media being sponsored by certain ex-naval officers who had been compulsorily retired from the Nigerian Navy and their relations trying to impugn the integrity of the Chief of Naval Staff and discredit the Board of Inquiry. Captain Medani even called the Nigerian Youths for Good Governance a fictitious group.

HOWEVER, hardly had he finished writing when another ship, an impounded Greek vessel, MT Tritya, escaped, this time, with three security officials detailed to secure it. This was disclosed at a press conference by the legal consultants to the shipping agents. The ship, according to the legal consultants, was legally detained as a pre-judgment security for the satisfaction of the civil claims of the shipping agents until an acceptable security by way of bank guarantee had been furnished by her owners. The ship had been impounded through an injunction obtained from the Federal High Court in Lagos against the vessel and three others claiming certain amounts of money until the final payment for short delivery of the cargo of gas and oil.

WE are worried by the regular disappearances of vessels from Nigeria, especially vessels detained over one offence or the other. We think that their escape in the various circumstances had been facilitated by bribed hands. The latest ‘disappearance’ is even curioser, as the security officers who were supposed to secure it ‘disappeared’ with the vessel. Were they abducted by the criminals who steered the vessel away under the cover of night? Or did they too connive with the criminals to get out of the country to seek for greener pasture elsewhere? The three security officers who reappeared some days after claimed they were abducted and brutalised by their captors before being released on the high sea. This claim needs to be investigated too by the authorities.

DISAPPEARANCE of vessels with ease speaks volumes about the security of the country’s territorial waters and this is where the Navy is implicated. If ships under its observation can ‘disappear’ without any trace and officers who had been found guilty had only been retired, how much easier will it be for other ships bound only by legal constraints from the courts to escape too?

THE ‘disappearance’ of MT Tritya should be properly investigated using all diplomatic leads and those found to be guilty should be appropriately punished by the relevant authorities. The Navy too should do better than whine about a smear campaign when in reality ships are disappearing, like small items that can easily be contained in someone’s pocket. It is plainly absurd that in the Nigerian state, ships can easily slide into the waters when the pockets of some felons bulge with ill-gotten wealth.


Report from the Creeks (Vanguard)

PASTOR Ayo Oritsejafor is the general overseer of Warri-based Word of Life Bible Church and the national president of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, PFN who recently initiated a spiritual solution to the protracted Niger Delta crisis. After several weeks of evangelical mission to Europe and America, he recently granted Sunday Vanguard, an interview during which he x-rayed the state of the nation, and the Niger Delta. Excerpts

THE Yar'Adua government started with an industrial action. We just want you to look at the state of the nation.


I have a feeling that I always seem to talk differently from everybody else. I don't like talking because that's what is popular or that's what everyone likes to hear; because there are certain things people want you to say.

For me, I will say, first, thank God that we came through the elections and we are still a nation together. I say thank God because there were some things some of us won't want to say publicly. Before the elections, there were spiritual indications which I never said anything to you about, that the problem was not just going to be the elections but immediately after the elections and so some of us had to set certain things in motion.

I don't want to go into all the details. We needed to get people to do certain things - to pray us through and so that's why I said, number one, thank God that we came through the elections and we are still and will continue to remain a nation. The second thing is, in my own opinion, some of the things that have happened like the industrial action, for example, it was rather unfortunate. I think first of all that there were problems on both sides.

I am going to be economical with words because it has come and gone. I don't think at this point, I should be the one stirring up anything, talking this way or talking that way but, like I said, it was a very unfortunate thing that happened when it happened at that point in time. But thank God again it has come and gone.

I believe also that the Yar'Adua's government is beginning to find its feet. It's not going to be easy because in my own opinion, he is stepping into very big shoes, big Nigeria and big Obasanjo that has just left. So, it's going to take a while for him to stabilise and be able to bring out his own style of doing things.

I will appeal to the media to help him and give him a chance. Sometimes, some of the things I read are so troubling. Oh Obasanjo is influencing you, and so on. They should just leave this man and let him find his feet. Let him know what he wants to do and how he wants to do it. Give him a break.

The media is only mirroring the mood of the nation. Everybody seems to think that the past president has an overbearing influencing on every decision taken by Yar'Adua...

Is there any proof of that?

Well, for instance, he has taken over the PDP Board of Trustees?

Are you a PDP member? (Laughs). Again, you see, these are some of the troubling things. You are not a member of PDP, I am not a member of PDP. Let's leave PDP to sort themselves out. I've heard people say Yar'Adua is not the president of PDP, he's the president of Nigeria. I hail that.

That is true. He stood for election as a PDP candidate but now he's the president of Nigeria. So let's concern ourselves more with what the government does for Nigeria. Let's downplay this issue of PDP Board or no Board and all that stuff.

I think we are over flogging that issue. To me, it's too much,

let's concentrate more on the government and Nigeria. We want to move forward. There are other parties. I don't want to get a PDP membership card. I'm not a member and I don't want to be a member, I don't think you want to. If they want somebody from the moon to be their chairman, that's their problem, that's not mine.

The day I become a member then I can tell them, I don't like it. But to say that Obasanjo has hand in Yar'Adua's government, to me again, is speculation. It is true that Obasanjo was very much instrumental in bringing him in, we won't run away from that. That's the truth! It's there, it's obvious, but that doesn't make him a man that doesn't know what he wants in life. I mean, when you look at him, the man is 56 years old for God's sake, he's not a child. How did he get to where he is?

Was it Obasanjo that held his arm and took him to school through university? Was it Obasanjo that governed Katsina State for him? I think we should give the man a break. A lot of most of the things we are seeing is speculation and I will tell you why there's so much speculation. Part of it is because there are certain persons who know what people want to hear. I keep repeating that, and they blow up these and you people make them movie stars because they know what you want to hear too.

So, they open their months wide and you put all these things on your front pages and then the next person you go to says his own too and you put his own there. The president and his predecessor should be friends, they shouldn't be enemies! For one thing they belong to the same party, one was instrumental to bringing in the other, and secondly Yar'Adua naturally should consult with him in the sense of you've been in this thing, how did you do it? What happened here, what happened there? These are normal things. So, to me, let them allow this man settle down and do his job.

As part of his settling down, he called for a government of national unity. Are you in support of that?

One hundred per cent! I think it's a very good thing. I think it's a good thing because, first of all, Nigeria is more important than me as a person. Nigeria is more important than Yar'Adua. Nigeria is more important than any individual person. Nigeria is more important than any political party. We all know that we had serious problems during the elections. It's a fact, you can't run away from it. The reality is that there were a lot ofirregularities from all parties. If I may say, some did it more than others, but they all did it.

Let's not pretend about it because that's a fact. I met someone who ran for an office in a certain state and somehow it didn't work out and he was trying to tell me how they did this. So, I sat him down and started telling him how his own people did this and that too. I said we at the grassroots know what happened.

So the truth is that, everybody had a part to play in whatever had happened before. So, looking at where we are coming from, when you think of all the things that happened, yes, some people have been declared winners at the presidential and the state levels.

To find a way to keep Nigeria one, I think it's a very wise thing to reach out to other parties and say alright, come and contribute your part to this. For example, you see that in Obasanjo government, whether we want to give him credit for it or not, some of the people he appointed did very well, some didn't.

Incidentally mostly the women did very well. But if you want to look at it, you should say, Obasanjo did very well as far as those people are concerned. But my point is, some of those people were not even party people initially, but eventually they had to become. But they were not at all. Some were actually from other parties.

Could you imagine if some of those people were not given the opportunity to serve, we will never be talking about them today. That's one. Two, they would never have achieved the things they achieved, not for themselves but for all of us, for Nigeria. The reason they were able to achieve those things was because they were brought in and given that opportunity.

I think the idea is, some of these other parties may have credible people who can come into government, who can also add to this nation, to Nigeria. Because all we want is power supply, good roads, water and food. These are the things we want.

The Niger Delta question and power will be his cardinal programmes. He has spent two months and not even one word yet in that direction...

Is it really that not one word yet? I wouldn't say not one word yet. Again like I've always told you I think nobody will say now that I love Yar'Adua so much. I don't even know the man. Take the Niger Delta for example, I know that they have inaugurated a committee that is supposed to look at the security situation in the area. That is very important because most of the people in that committee know what is on ground.

If you go to Delta State, you'll see that the same thing is on ground now. There is a committee set up by the governor, a waterway security committee and the people in that committee know what is on ground. Now, that is very important. If you are going to solve the Niger Delta problem, you must involve the people who know what is on ground. They've done that. For example, again, NDDC, I initiated something, the week long prayers for peace which was concluded recently.

I actually initiated it through the past president. I think that is very important because one of the mistakes they've always made, when they call the so-called stakeholders in the Niger Delta, they never involve the Church. And it puzzles me, it has always puzzled me why they don't bring in the Church.

I went with the vice president and the Delta State governor, Dr. Uduaghan, to the creeks. I was shocked the way I was received! I was surprised by some of the leaders of the town and the young people. Before the vice president arrived, because some of us went ahead of him, they took me into a big room and gave me a special welcome separately. You know the way we entertain visitors. They brought out money, put money on the table, everything, received me.

I couldn't believe myself. They started singing songs with my name, but I'm a pastor. As I stepped into the place, they were shouting Papa. I couldn't believe myself. I said this is unbelievable. In this kind of place? So, it's a mistake not to have involved the Church all along, because we have something at stake. The Niger Delta, basically, is supposed to be a Christian part of this country.

That is the truth. Let's be honest with ourselves. There are no genuine Muslims anywhere in the Niger Delta. They are not there. Everybody you see there, if they want to be honest with you are Christians, one way or the other. They may not be very committed but that's who they are. Now, if they are Christians, they were baptised in a church probably. Their mothers took them to a church; their fathers took them to a church.

Organizing of prayers


They have gone to a church and I am a pastor. There are still some credible pastors that you can still involve. Like I said to NDDC and I hope we can get this across also to the government and those in charge, not only are we organising prayers, which is very important but we want to be involved further.

We want to be involved in negotiations in the sense of, you see, some of these boys don't trust a lot of government officials but there are people they believe are credible. It's possible they may think some of us are also credible. We can become the bridge, we can say to these boys, we have talked to government, let's give them one year - no fighting, no cheating, no nothing, put your arms down, let them do something.

If they don't, then nobody can blame you. And then we say to government, you see, we have put our neck on the line, my credibility is on the line, now perform. If they don't perform, we'll come out publicly to condemn them. I don't need money from government. I don't need anything. I say it everywhere, every time, I don't need it. No governor has given me one naira before, it doesn't happen because I don't want it. I don't need it. If they don't perform, we will come out and shout. And when we start talking, people will listen because they know we are not politicians.

So they need to involve us more.

For example, the master plan, a plan is just a plan until you can implement it, but how do you implement it? So, we want to be involved to help, so that this plan can be implemented. And in implementing it, there has to be dialogue and this dialogue has to involve the church. A lot of the institutions in this country have been bastadized, many don't have credibility and I don't want to start mentioning them.

But I think to an extent, there are still people in the Church leadership that have credibility that can say this is it and they will stick to it. And we know that if we say something and we don't do what we say then we're in trouble because we have nothing to preach to anybody. My members can walk out of the church because truth, justice, equity, all these things are directly, not indirectly, related to what we do. It's a direct thing. So if I don't stick to what I say, it goes completely against everything that am saying. So I have no platform.

What practical solution do you expect from the prayer sessions?

First of all, everything physical derives from the spiritual and so prayer is very important because there's no way you'll want to achieve peace without calling on the prince of peace. God is the owner of peace. There is a spirituality that goes with peace. When you call upon Him and you do it right, God can enter into the hearts of men. Two people who disagreed before suddenly can begin to agree.

You remember in the Bible, Jacob was coming from his uncle's place and he was told that Esau was coming with 400 men angry because of what Jacob did to him. And Jacob had an encounter, in other words, he had an all-night prayer meeting. In the morning, when Esau saw him, instead of killing him, Esau embraced him. So who created that peace? Was it Jacob? No, it was supernatural. So there is a supernatural aspect to the problem in the Niger Delta.

There are demonic forces that want to maintain the status quo because it is only in this kind of atmosphere that idol worship can thrive. Idol worship only thrives in confusion, in poverty, in this kind of situation. The moment development starts coming, believe you me, idol worship is gone.

Nobody will have time for that. And these spirits know this that's why they blind our people spiritually to make sure they can't understand this fact. If not, you sit down and think, our people had all these shrines, the white man came and colonised them with all these heavy shrines, used them as slaves and yet the juju couldn't do anything.

They can't even think, when these people came, some of our people were naked, they had to give you cloth to cover you and your juju was there, your juju liked you naked, running around in the forest. People are not thinking, with all these things you're serving, telling you bring blood, telling you to kill your brother, kill your fellow human being. You think that's a good thing? It certainly cannot be, but they are not thinking. So there are problems there and these spirits like it that way.

So we have to challenge this and the way to challenge it is spiritually. You can't challenge spiritual things with physical things. So what we have brought into it now is the spiritual dimension so that the prayers that have been done now for this one week, and like I told them, you can't end with one week of prayers.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #2 100707


Camp Attacked, Militants Repelled (Reuters)

Nigerian troops repelled an attack on a construction site run by Korean firm Daewoo in the Niger Delta early on Tuesday, killing one of the attackers, a military commander said.
The attack took place at Mbiama, on the outskirts of the delta's main city of Port Harcourt, where Daewoo are doing contract work for Italian oil firm Agip .

Daewoo staff including some foreigners live on the site and the military commander said they were the target of the attack.

"The gunmen came in a bus to abduct some foreigners who were in the camp at the time but my men repelled the attack," said Lawrence Ngubane, head of the Joint Task Force responsible for security in the Niger Delta.

"We killed one of the attackers and arrested one. We also seized the bus, some weapons and ammunition," he said.

None of the Daewoo staff was hurt or kidnapped, Ngubane said.

Abductions for ransom of foreign oil workers are extremely frequent in the Niger Delta, as are attacks on oil production facilities. About 200 expatriates have been kidnapped since the start of 2006, of whom at least 16 are still being held.

Oil output from Nigeria, the world's eighth-biggest exporter, is down by over 20 percent because of these attacks and thousands of expatriate workers and their families have left the region since the violence intensified at the start of 2006.



Cults Clash, Houses Destroyed (Wire Reports)

Several people were injured and many houses and vehicles were destroyed in two days of fighting between two rival cult gangs in southern Nigeria's volatile Ogoniland, police said Tuesday.

Riot police were brought in to break up the violence which erupted Sunday between the Deewell and Deebam gangs in Bane in the Khana local government area, Rivers state police spokeswoman Ireju Barasua told AFP.

"Several people were injured while vehicles and houses were razed" in the fighting which continued until Monday, she added.

Local press said at least two people were feared killed.

Bane is the home town of the late environmental campaigner and writer Ken Saro-Wiwa, who was killed along with eight other Ogoni activists by the military in November 1995 over a trumped up charge of killing four fellow Ogoni chiefs.

Oil-rich Ogoniland is a hotbed of civil unrest in the restive Niger Delta, home to Nigeria's multi-billion-dollar oil and gas resources.

Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell, which is Nigeria's leading producer, was forced to quit Ogoniland in 1993 because of community unrest.

Residents of Ogoni communities accuse foreign oil companies, especially Shell, of destroying their ecosystem without paying adequate compensation.




VP Says Niger Delta's Security Top Priority (This Day)

Vice President Goodluck Jonathan has revealed that his main assignment in the first six months of the life of the administration is to stabilise the Niger Delta area.

He also said the lack of coordination that proved quite unhelpful in solving the crisis and other related matters in the Niger Delta in the past is already being taking care of by the Yar'Adua administration.


The Vice President said these yesterday at the Aso Rock State House when he received a six-man delegation on a courtesy visit from the parent company of Nigerian Agip Oil Company (ENI), led by its Chief Operation Officer, Mr. Stefano Cao.

He also said the deplorable security situation in Lagos State would also be given adequate attention so that Nigerians could sleep peacefully at night while their businesses and investments thrive without fear from the men of the underworld.

The Vice President told the visiting group that the Federal Government has made appreciable progress in the Niger Delta area by securing the understanding of the leaders of those agitating for a better deal in the region.

He said several talks have already been held with all the stakeholders in the area to ensure that such meetings have far reaching effect in resolving the crises.

On the security situation in Lagos State, Jonathan said "we will ensure that security situation in the Niger Delta area is improved soon, even Lagos State security situation will be looked into, so that business and investment can thrive and people can sleep safely at night".

Monday, July 2, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 020707

Six Dead After Militants Clash in Port Harcourt (DPA, Xinhua)

Four people were killed in a clash took place on Saturday in Nkpor-Rumuolumeni near Port Harcourt, the capital city of Nigeria's southeastern Rivers State, local newspapers reported on Sunday.

U.S. Consulate General LAGOS

NIGERIA

July 2, 2007

Warden Message

This Warden Message is being issued to advise American citizens that there has been a recent increase in the reporting of criminal activity impacting the expatriate community in Lagos. This reporting indicates a trend involving armed criminal gangs targeting small hotels, guesthouses and restaurants on Ikoyi and Victoria Island. During these attacks the criminals enter the property by force or stealth, take control of it and proceed to rob the guests and staff of their valuables. In the case of hotels, the criminals have gone door-to-door in a methodical manner and forced their way into individual rooms. In one recent case, an American citizen was killed after armed robbers entered his hotel room.

The U.S. Consulate General Lagos has advised its American citizen personnel and family members to take the following actions if they are the victims of a robbery attempt:

· Try to stay calm. Don't make any sudden movements to upset the robber;

· Do exactly as you are told, DO NOT resist or make eye contact!

· If you have to move, tell the robber what you are going to do and why;

· Don't be a hero. It's better to lose your money than your life;

· Give the robber time to leave;

· Note his direction of travel when he leaves;

· Try to get a description of his vehicle ONLY if you can do so without exposing yourself to harm.
There also has been an increase in reliable reports of armed robberies in and around Ikoyi, but more specifically the area of Osborne Road-Dolphin Estate. The criminals time their attacks to coincide with traffic traveling between Ikoyi and the mainland in the early evening to capitalize on the inevitable congestion and lower moving traffic. Criminals have previously set up roadblocks masquerading as police checkpoints and used other ruses to ambush unsuspecting motorists traveling between the airport and the islands in the Kingsway Road-2nd Avenue area and along the Third Mainland Bridge, particularly in the early morning hours (0400-0500).

The U.S. Consulate General Lagos has advised its American citizen personnel and family members to take the following precautions to avoid becoming the victim of a carjacking or robbery while in their vehicle:

• In traffic, look around for possible avenues of escape;

• While difficult in Lagos, do your best to keep some distance between you and the vehicle in front so you can maneuver easily if necessary – about one-half of your vehicle's length. (You should always be able to see the rear tires of the vehicle in front of you);

• When stopped, use your rear and side view mirrors to stay aware of your surroundings. Also keep your doors locked and windows up. This increases your safety and makes it more difficult for an attacker to surprise you.

The following actions should be taken if one becomes the victim of a carjacking or robbery while in a car:

• In most carjacking situations, the attackers are interested only in the vehicle – give up the car freely, do not resist or argue;

• Try to stay calm;

• Make the attacker aware if children are present;

• Listen carefully to all directions;

• Make no quick or sudden movements that the attacker could construe as a counter attack and avoid eye contact;

• Always keep your hands in plain view and tell the attacker of every move in advance;

• If prompted, get out of car while keeping your hands in plain view at all times;

• On demand, offer cash;

• Depart the scene as soon as possible.

We continue to advise all Americans to review their security procedures, remain vigilant to their surroundings, and report specific incidences of targeted violence to the U.S. Embassy in Abuja or the U. S. Consulate General in Lagos at the numbers below.

For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling abroad should regularly monitor the Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs internet website at http://travel.state.gov/, where the current Worldwide Caution, Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings can be found. Up to date information on security can also be obtained by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free in the U.S., or, for callers outside the U.S. and Canada, a regular toll line at 1-202-501-4444. These numbers are available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through Friday (except U.S. Federal Holidays.)

U.S. Embassy Abuja is located at Plot 1075 Diplomatic Drive, Central Business District, Abuja; the telephone number is 09-461-4000. E-Mail: ConsularAbuja@state.gov

The U.S. Consulate Lagos is located at 2 Walter Carrington Crescent, Victoria Island, Lagos; the telephone number is 01-261-1215. For after-hours emergencies, call 011 [234] (1) 261-1414, 261-0195, 261-0078, 261-0139, or 261-6477. E-Mail: lagoscons2@state.gov

Website:
http://nigeria.usembassy.gov

Militants Abduct Oil Workers in Defiance of VP's Visit

Delta State Governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, on Sunday, disclosed that some workers of the American oil giant, Chevron Nigeria Limited, had been kidnapped by the Niger Delta militants at Okerenkoko, Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta state.

Uduaghan said the oil workers were abducted on Thursday, shortly after the Vice-President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, departed the creeks of Delta state.

He said the militants were protesting the failure of Jonathan to visit their communities on Thursday.

Uduaghan, who made this revelation, did not however reveal the number of oil workers abducted by the militants.

Uduaghan, in his message at the commencement of a 7-day prayer session declared by the Niger Delta Development Commission for the restoration of peace to Niger Delta at the Word of Life Bible Church, Warri, on Sunday, said some workers of CNL were abducted by the militants on Thursday.

Uduaghan said the oil workers were yet to be freed as at Sunday.

He said, ”Following logistic problems, the VP could not touch all the communities he was scheduled to touch.

“This sparked up another round of anger in the land on Thursday.

”The people got angry and felt they were left out. They even went as far as taking some workers of Chevron hostage, and we are on that, trying to calm and manage the situation up till Saturday evening.”

Udughan, however, accused the leaders and youths of the region of being the masterminds of the increasing act of abduction of expatriates, especially oil workers, in the region.

Uduaghan also decried the increasing involvement of the elders and leaders of the region in criminal activities.

He added that the development was unfortunate, saying that the prevailing insecurity in the region had led to exodus of investors from the area.

Uduaghan also stated that some investors had fled the region in the past few weeks.

Responding, an official of the CNL, who preferred anonymity said, “To the best of my knowledge, nothing like that happened.

“ We are aware that Mr. Vice-President and the governor visited the area on Thursday, but was not told of any incident.


Syrian Abducted from Port Harcourt (Vanguard)

Militants struck again in the early hours of yesterday in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital and kidnapped a Syrian, Mr. John Daher.

Seven gunmen, according to the Rivers State Police Command Public Relations Officer, waylaid a Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) bus inside which the Syrian was riding along Ero Road, off Olu Obasanjo Road, New Government Reservation Area, Port Harcourt.

Daher is a project engineer with a Port Harcourt based firm, Sputoland.

No group has, however, claimed responsibility for the kidnap, which was the second within a week in the Rivers State capital.


Human Rights Group Praises Jonathan (Vanguard)

Committee for the Defence of Human Rights (CDHR) in Delta State, weekend, applauded the Vice President, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan for his recent visit to the creeks of Delta State but suggested that future meetings of the Presidential Committee for the Socio-Economic Development of the Coastal States should, henceforth, be held in the creeks of the Niger Delta region and not in Aso Rock, Abuja.

Chairman of Delta CDHR, Mr. Oghenjabor Ikimi told Vanguard in an interview, yesterday, in Warri, “It is when the meeting is held in the creeks that government can fully appreciate the plight of the people living in the creeks in a bid to fast track the infrastructural development of the entire region”.

Mr Ikimi also commended President Umaru Musa Yar' Adua for having the courage to fulfill his campaign promise to the people by declaring his assets and liabilities publicly.

“This singular act”, he said, “has further portrayed the President and Commander-In -Chief of the Armed Forces, as a leader that is prepared to fight corruption head-on and lead by example”.

“ We call on all other public office holders in Nigeria to emulate the example of Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar-Adua in this regard in the interest of good governance”, he added.

His words, “We as a body, have resolved to draft and sponsor a private bill to be tagged transparency and public accountability bill to the National Assembly, which when passed into law, would amongst other things, compel the executive operators of the three tiers of government to publish on a monthly basis a statement of accounts of all monies received from the Federation Account, assets, expenditures and liabilities for interested members of the public to peruse in the interest of transparency and accountability”.

“Furthermore, the proposed bill when it becomes an Act of parliament would also compel executive operators of the three tiers of government to always demand that public sign post be erected by government contractors on all government project sites showing amongst other things, the amount such contracts are awarded by government so that members of the public can have a first hand information on how government disburses and spends monies kept in the public treasuries for capital projects”, he asserted.

Future Peace in the Niger Delta -- Analysis (Mail & Guardian)

Most people get perhaps one chance in a lifetime to make a truly grand entrance. Not so Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, the Ijaw leader of the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force (NDPVF) who was released on bail and returned to Port Harcourt in late June after spending 20 months in detention on charges of treason.

The huge crowd that turned out to welcome him was even bigger than the crowd of October 2 2004, when he returned from peace talks with then-president Olusegun Obasanjo after months of violence between the NDPVF and the Niger Delta Vigilante, an armed group funded by the government of Rivers State.

Asari was arrested in 2005 after he said during a newspaper interview that he would work for the break-up of Nigeria. Following his incarceration, violence in the Niger Delta escalated and a new group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, emerged and began taking foreign oil workers hostage.

The huge support for Asari confirms his charismatic leadership, but it also underlines the fact that people in the Niger Delta hunger for a change in their poor living conditions.

Dr Sofiri Peterside, a director of the Centre for Advanced Social Science, based in Port Harcourt, said: "Asari has demonstrated that he is a charismatic hero of the people, going by the massive crowd that went to the airport and lined the streets to welcome him from Abuja. His return also underlines the reality that there can be no dialogue on the Niger Delta without the participation of people like him."

A source from the Ijaw community told the Mail & Guardian that Ijaw leaders had worked hard to get Asari released before he was scheduled to appear in court because they were concerned that Asari, known for being mercurial, might have insulted the judge and frustrated efforts to free him.

Asari said he was "not aware of any conditional release. I was not in court when it was decided that I was granted bail. I was surprised to hear that I had been granted bail."

Asari has returned to a Niger Delta of rising acts of violence, including hostage-taking of foreign oil workers for ransom, attacks on oil facilities and bunkering, the illegal siphoning and sale of crude oil by armed groups.

As if to underline the gravity of the tension in the area, the Nigerian Agip Oil Company recently had to declare force majeure, following its failure to meet supply obligations. This followed an attack by armed men on a flow station at Ogboinbiri, which has a daily output of 40 000 barrels. At least 11 Nigerian soldiers are believed to have been killed in the attack.

The attack followed another by the Joint Task Force, responsible for security in the waterways of the oil-rich area, which led to the killing of nine men believed to be militants. After the attacks, the government ordered more gunboats to be deployed in the area.

Meanwhile, Asari's release by the new government of Umar Musa Yar'Ardua is seen as a conciliatory gesture by an administration that seems intent on sending a message that it will not pursue the hardline military approach of the previous government.

The Obasanjo government displayed a brittle intolerance for any challenge from the militant groups and continued to deploy troops to troubled areas, even though the soldiers often ended up being humiliated by the fighters.

Asari's return to the Niger Delta is expected to be the first step in a process of dialogue with the people of the region, who have been engaged in decades of conflict with the Nigerian state over issues of self-determination, the practice of true federalism and the adoption of revenue sharing between the central government and the Niger Delta states.

Much is expected of Asari. He started off well by continuing to condemn the practice of hostage-taking by many of the militant groups, a position he held even in detention. When he was released he said: "The criminality that is going on now has nothing to do with the Ijaw people. Some of these groups exist only on the internet and others on the pages of newspapers."

Many of the groups that engage in violence claimed they did so to compel the government to release Asari and Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, the former governor of Bayelsa state, who was detained in 2005 and accused of fraud.

Although Asari commands respect among many groups, a factor that aided his NDPVF group in its battles in 2003 and 2004, many of the Niger Delta militia groups have grown wealthy and powerful as a result of the hostage-taking that started last year. Their influence has been linked to the protection of and collaboration with certain government officials.

There are fears of clashes between Asari and such groups, which might worsen tension in the area. At the same time, most of the militant groups are of Ijaw stock. The next few months could see incidents of Ijaw-on-Ijaw violence that could worsen the situation.

Professor Kimse Okoko, president of the Ijaw National Congress, said: "We welcome the release of Asari from unjust detention, but the issues of the Niger Delta go beyond him. Now that he has been released, we wait for the Yar'Ardua government to demonstrate its sincerity by initiating dialogue with the Ijaw and other peoples of the Niger Delta."

Okoko's sentiments are echoed in Peterside's warning of the consequences of treating the situation in the Delta simply as a criminal matter.

"Yes, many people condemn what has emerged as the proliferation of armed groups in the region. But, the truth is, even the emergence of the militant groups, including those involved in hostage-taking, is a result of the failure of the Nigerian state to deal with the issues at the centre of the agitations in a just manner. The solution is a process of dialogue with the people of the region to culminate in a constitutional resolution of the issues," Peterside said.

Asari agrees, saying that the way to resolve the conflict in the Niger Delta is to turn attention to the demands of the various ethnic nationalities. "The Niger Delta struggle is focused. You can find that in the Kaiama declaration of the Ijaw people, the Ogoni Bill of Rights and the Aklakla declaration of the Egi people. A sovereign national conference is requisite for the resolution of the Niger Delta issue."


Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #3 200607






Strike Report
(AFP)

A general strike gripped Nigeria Wednesday, posing the first significant test for the new president and putting oil markets on edge over possible disruption to supplies from one of the world's top crude exporters.

The main labour unions decided to go ahead with the strike after the government of President Umaru Yar'Adua, who was only sworn in late last month, refused to reverse a 15-percent hike in the price of petrol.

"The general strike and mass protest continue tomorrow (Thursday). As we have earlier announced, the strike will be indefinite until the federal government returns the price of petrol to 65 naira (0.51 dollars, 0.38 euros)," Abdulwaheed Omar, head of the blue-collar Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), told reporters.

He urged workers to set up compliance squads countrywide "to ensure all work places are shut down".

"The burden of fixing Nigeria and removing the landmines planted by former president Olusegun Obasanjo rests on President Yar'Adua. This responsibility cannot be shifted or repudiated merely on the excuse that the problems were inherited."

He was referring to a series of unpopular measures such as the fuel price hike introduced by Obasanjo in his last days in power.

"President Yar'Adua needs to appreciate that it is not a sign of weakness to listen to the people and act in accordance with their will," Omar added.

In the commercial capital Lagos, streets that are normally jammed were virtually free of traffic, with the impact of the strike worsened by heavy rain.

Some workers complained they had tried to come into work but said they had been turned back by union officials at impromptu roadblocks. Others said they could no longer afford the cost of transportation which has risen threefold in the past few days.

In the administrative capital Abuja only a few senior government officials showed up for work. Union officials turned out to enforce compliance with the strike, preventing some service stations selling fuel from doing so.

Union officials in the northern commercial capital Kano forced some shops to close and obliged passengers to get out of the few minibuses still circulating.

Most government schools were closed across the country, as were banks. Many flights were suspended or disrupted, but markets, street food stalls and some supermarkets stayed open.

By Monday fears of the walkout, which unions had been threatening for two weeks, and which could further hamper oil exports from Nigeria -- Africa's biggest oil producer and the world's sixth largest exporter -- had sent crude prices to their highest levels in nine months.

But initially at least there were no signs of production, much of which is offshore and automated, being affected.

"There's still no sign of anything being paralysed for the time being," one oil industry source said.

"There are no reports yet of a halt in exports," Shell's spokesman Precious Okolobo said.

"Our employees are complying with the strike action. There are no reported disruptions in production yet," said Chevron's spokesman Femi Odumabo.

A spokeswoman for Total likewise said production was not affected.

One quarter of Nigeria's total daily output of 2.6 million barrels is already lost due to unrest in the southern Niger delta region.

Union officials said it was just a matter of time until exports are hit.

"Compliance .. will come up gradually till it reaches its peak. This is just the beginning," Elijah Okougho, secretary- general of the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG), the blue-collar oil workers' union, told AFP.



US Consulate Warden Message - Strike
U.S. Embassy, ABUJA U.S. Consulate General LAGOS NIGERIA June 20, 2007 Warden Message Caution Advised for the Duration of Labor Strikes


This Warden message is being issued to advise American citizens that Nigerian labor leaders have called for nation-wide strikes beginning today, Wednesday June 20, 2007, to protest the recent increase in the price of petroleum products, taxes, and other related issues.

Strike actions have already taken place in Nigeria, public transportation has been disrupted, and many domestic airline flights have been delayed and cancelled. We have received reports of roads being blocked in and around Abuja as well as in other areas. Demonstrations have occurred in the vicinity of government offices in Abuja, and major transportation routes, and police have responded by clearing the blocked roadways. The duration and scope of these labor strikes are uncertain and have the potential to turn violent; therefore American citizens are urged to avoid areas of demonstrations if possible and to exercise extreme caution if within the vicinity of any demonstrations. The police are staffing checkpoints at strategic locations around the Lagos metropolitan area. Nonetheless, travelers should restrict their intra-city movements to essential travel only as the security environment could deteriorate rapidly and without prior notice.

In response to these events, effective immediately, the U.S. Mission in Nigeria has placed the following restrictions on all official personnel serving in Nigeria as follows: (1) no discretionary travel by road outside of the city limits of Abuja and Lagos, and (2) no discretionary domestic travel by air. This restriction will be in place until such time as the current situation improves and the Mission rescinds the restrictions.

Deliveries of gasoline have been delayed or suspended. Due to the likelihood of fuel shortages continuing for an indeterminate period, American citizens should conserve fuel and avoid unnecessary travel, and ensure that sufficient food supplies are available. Transportation may be severely affected, and additional police checkpoints are likely to appear on many roads.

The U.S. Mission in Nigeria advises all American citizens to exercise caution, avoid demonstrations and large crowds, and carefully assess local conditions and act accordingly. The United States Embassy in Abuja and the U.S. Consulate General in Lagos expect to remain open during this period of labor strikes; however, as conditions dictate, services may be limited or suspended. Any American citizen having consular business that cannot be postponed should contact the respective Consular Sections before coming to either the Embassy or Consulate General.

We have recommended that our staff evaluate their current personal contingency/emergency planning and at a minimum take the following precautions:

1) Fully fuel and inspect motor vehicles to ensure they are properly functioning;

2) Stock up on food and water so that you have sufficient stores to last several days;

3) Check locks and doors and remain in positive control over all keys to entry ways, doors, and locks;

4) Ensure mobile phones are fully charged; and

5) Have on hand a basic first aid kit.

We continue to advise all Americans to review their security procedures, remain vigilant to their surroundings, and report specific incidences of targeted violence to the U.S. Embassy in Abuja or the U. S. Consulate General in Lagos at the numbers below.

For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling abroad should regularly monitor the Department’s Bureau of Consular Affairs internet website at http://travel.state.gov/, where the current Worldwide Caution, Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings can be found. Up to date information on security can also be obtained by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free in the U.S., or, for callers outside the U.S. and Canada, a regular toll line at 1-202-501-4444. These numbers are available from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through Friday (except U.S. Federal Holidays.)

U.S. Embassy Abuja is located at Plot 1075 Diplomatic Drive, Central Business District, Abuja; the telephone number is 09-461-4000. E-Mail: ConsularAbuja@state.gov


Check Flight Information

Today at Mohammed Murtala International Airport -- Inbound KLM is delayed three hours and outgoing flight tonight is still on. KLM web site in Netherlands no update on cancelled flights. BA web site same.

Today -- Two Virgin flights to Lagos cancelled.
Today -- Emirates Air flight from Lagos will fly to, Kano for refueling and then to Dubai.

Nigeria Security Update #1 200607


Nigerian Government Issues Ultimatum (Daily Sun)

The Federal Government on Tuesday issued a-48 hour ultimatum to Bayelsa State Government to ascertain the whereabouts of 12 soldiers and nine oil workers declared missing after an encounter with the militants in the state on Sunday.

The government said the soldiers and oil workers must be produced dead or alive before the expiration of the ultimatum.

Consequently, the government threatened a military operation in the state on the expiration of the deadline.

Already, the Commander of the Joint Task Force in the Niger Delta, Operation Restore Hope, Brig.-Gen. Lawrence Ngubane, visited Government House, Yenogoa, on Tuesday, to convey the latest development to the state government.

It was not, however, clear if Ngubane, who departed 93 Battalion, Effurun, headquarters of JTF on Tuesday morning, met the state Governor, Mr. Timipre Silva - Sam.

The militants attacked Ogboinbiri flow station of the Nigerian Agip Oil Company on Sunday, apparently to avenge the killing of their kinsmen on Wednesday by soldiers on surveillance duty on the oil platform.

It was gathered that nine out of the 11 unarmed youths who were on their way to a community in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area in Bayelsa State were allegedly killed by the troops attached to the JTF.

Although the authorities of JTF were hopeful that the soldiers and the oil workers were still alive, investigation revealed that they might have been killed by the militants.

The spokesman of JTF, Major Omale Ochagwuba, declined to confirm if the soldiers were killed or abducted.

However, our correspondent learnt that the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Owoye Azazi, who supervises the JTF, contacted Ngubane on Monday evening and intimated him with the position of the federal government on the incident.

Azazi reportedly directed Ngubane to convey the position to Silva-Sam in Yenagoa on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, uneasy calm reigned at JTF‘s headquarters in Effurun, Delta State , on Tuesday due to fate of the troops of the outfit.

Officers and men of the security agency met in groups discussing the fate of their colleagues amidst reports that the authorities were preparing for a military operation to dislodge the militants from the oil platform.

Ngubane, in a telephone interview on Tuesday, confirmed that he visited Yenagoa but he declined to give details of his mission in the area.

”I am in Yenogoa and I am in a meeting now. I don‘t have time to entertain questions at the moment,” Ngubane said before he hung the phone.

But a senior officer of JTF confirmed the ultimatum to Bayelsa state government by the federal government.

The source, who craved anonymity, said Ngugane was mandated to deliver the deadline to Silva - Sam.

In a related development, nine Ijaw youths were on Monday night arrested by the Joint Task Force in the Niger Delta, Operation Restore Hope, on the Abiteye production platform of Chevron Nigeria Limited in Delta State .

Also, the American oil firm regained the facility on Monday night, shortly after the protesting youths from Benikrukru community were dislodged from the platform by the troops of JTF.

The troops of JTF were supported by some indigenes of the community.

Our correspondent learnt that reinforcement sent to the platform by the Commander of JTF, Brig.-Gen. Lawrence Ngubane, overpowered the youths and freed the facility on Monday night.


Strike Still On, Oil Prices Rise (Associated Press)

Oil prices inched up Tuesday, setting a nine-month closing high, after labor unions in Nigeria rejected the government's efforts to avert a nationwide strike. Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer and one of the top overseas suppliers to the United States.

Light, sweet crude for July delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange rose a penny to settle at $69.10 a barrel, the highest close since Sept. 1.

Labor unions on Tuesday rejected the Nigerian government's offer to halve a price hike on automobile fuel, only hours before its strike protesting the increase was set to begin.

The unions are threatening to target the strike action at the oil industry, with the aim of stanching oil exports that count for 90 percent of the government's income.

Continued violence in Nigeria also has kept oil prices within striking distance of $70 a barrel.

Recent attacks by villagers and gunmen cut supply at two Nigerian oil facilities. Hundreds of angry villagers chased workers away from a Chevron Corp. oil-transfer facility Monday in southern Nigeria. Gunmen also seized some two dozen Nigerian workers and security forces at a flow station operated by Italian energy giant Eni SPA's subsidiary Agip.

Militant leader Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, freed on bail, said Tuesday that armed groups in Nigeria's restive south will stop attacks on oil facilities to give the new government a chance to deal with the region's problems.

However, he warned there would not be an immediate end to the seizure of foreign workers.

Also supportive of crude prices is news of a potential strike by oil workers in Brazil. Workers at state-run oil firm Petroleo Brasileiro SA, or Petrobras, may go on a five-day strike beginning July 5, Brazil's main oil workers' union said in a news release.

"In a bullish market, every thimble full of oil counts," said Peter Beutel, president of U.S. energy risk management firm Cameron Hanover. "Every little bullish feature will loom large."

Traders are also looking ahead to the weekly inventory report from the Energy Information Administration due out Wednesday. According to analysts polled by Dow Jones Newswires, gasoline supplies, which were unchanged in last week's report at 201.5 million barrels, are expected to increase by an average of 1 million barrels.

A rash of refinery disruptions in the last several months have reduced gasoline supplies, which have been at the low end of historical averages during the summer driving season.

Refinery utilization is expected to increase by an average of 0.6 percentage point to 89.8 percent of capacity, following two straight weeks of declines.

Analysts estimate an average gain of 900,000 barrels to 123.5 million barrels for distillate stocks, which include heating oil and diesel fuel. Oil inventories are expected to fall by an average of 150,000 barrels.

Brent crude lost 34 cents to close at $71.84 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.

In other trading on the Nymex, gasoline futures slipped 2.97 cents to settle at $2.2346 a gallon. Heating oil futures dropped 0.74 cent to end at $2.0268 a gallon, and natural gas prices fell 17.1 cents to $7.519 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Nigerian Army Deploys More Troops in Niger Delta (Daily Sun)

The Nigerian Army has sent more troops to drive militants from an oil plant they have occupied in Bayelsa State since they abducted 27 people there at the weekend.

"Following the reverses we have suffered in our attempt to secure the platform with minimum force, we decided to increase the number of our troops and the grade of armament, so as to save a very bad situation," a military officer told AFP on Tuesday, on condition of anonymity.

Suspected rebels attacked a flow station operated by Agip, a subsidiary of Italian oil company, Eni, in the southern Bayelsa State on Sunday in what military sources said was a reprisal for last week's killing of nine militants by soldiers.

Eni said that 16 of its Nigerian employees and 11 soldiers guarding the facility had been seized in the attack while another eight employees and 40 soldiers escaped.

An industry source, meanwhile, said on Tuesday, he doubted the soldiers would be able to dislodge the militants from the facility. "It won’t be an easy task to dislodge the boys. What they do is that they mine the platform as soon as they take it over, and they challenge the soldiers to dare (to) fire a shot. If a shot is fired, the entire area will go up in flames," the source said.

Kidnappings and armed attacks have intensified in the Niger Delta region, where some 200 foreigners and scores of Nigerians have been abducted since the start of 2006. These kidnappings, coupled with acts of vandalism and sabotage, have cost Nigeria an annual revenue loss of 4.4 billion dollars.

Asari - "I can't stop hostage taking" (Vanguard)

Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, leader of the Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force (NDVF), says he is not in a position to stop hostage taking by militants in the Niger Delta.

He told reporters at the Murtala Muhammed Airport, Ikeja, yesterday that he could not stop the act, “since it was precipitated by the Federal Government."

The NDVF leader said it was the responsibility of the Federal Government to take appropriate measures to stop the trend.

He, however, said he had been rallying the various militant groups in the Niger Delta to find a lasting solution to commercial hostage taking and forge a common front for advancement of the region’s struggle.

Speaking at a reception held in his honour by Niger Deltans in Lagos, he said he had spoken to leaders of some Niger Delta militant groups including Ateke Tom and that soon a meeting would be held to fashion out a way forward for the region.

He also solicited support for Vice President Goodluck Jonathan whom he described as “a good man,” adding that Jonathan’s emergence as the nation’s Vice President had put a “K-leg” in the Niger Delta Struggle.

“On the issue of hostage-taking, I want to condemn it in all its ramifications. It is not because anybody asked me to condemn it. You cannot claim to be doing justice when you are doing injustice to another person. The people who came to work in the Niger Delta were brought by an unjust law,” he said, adding: “When you catch people and you confine them and you ask for money not for the struggle, it is sinful. If it is for the struggle, it is a different matter.”

He also asked for the release of MASSOB leader, Chief Ralph Uwazurike, saying his (Dokubo’s) freedom would not be complete without the release of Uwazurike.

Dokubo, accompanied by his lawyer, Mr. Festus Keyamo, also reiterated his position that former President Olusegun Obasanjo be prosecuted for his evil deeds while in power. He insisted that the former President must be made to account for all monies made during his eight-year administration, adding that the nation has not felt the impact of huge sums of money made during Obasanjo’s administration.

Coordinator of Ijaw Monitoring Group, organisers of the reception, Mr Joseph Evah, said Dokubo was in Lagos to thank the press, the civil society and the Niger Delta people for their role in ensuring that he regained his freedom. He said the struggle in the region had just begun.

Speakers at the reception included Comrade Ayodele Akele, Festus Keyamo, representatives of the Arewa Youths Forum, Oodua People’s Congress, MASSOB, Northern Friends of the Niger Delta, among others.

On what he was expecting from the Yar’Adua’s government, Dokubo said the only solution to the problems of Nigeria was the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference, adding that Nigerians were ready to dialogue on the future of the country.

According to him, the leadership of the country had always shied away from dialogue because many want the status quo of oppression and suppression to continue.

Former Governor of Lagos State Praises Asari Dokubo (Vanguard)

The immediate past Governor of Lagos State, Sen Bola Tinubu has faulted the existence of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) as a panacea to solving the Niger Delta problems, saying it is not the solution to the region.

Tinubu, who spoke during a “thank you” visit on him at his Lagos residence by the just released leader of the NDPVF Asari Dokubu explained that the commission is just “a patronage organization which can not solve the problem” of the region.

He emphasized that it is by conveying “a forum of the stake holders, which would involve the oil companies, leaders of thought and traditional ruler in the area” that a lasting solution can be found to the recurring problem.

He praised Dokubo for his unrelenting efforts towards the cause of his people despite his 21 months incarceration, while asking Dokubo to immediately seek medical attention.

“We are the same; we work towards the same goal. We have a common conviction.
“You have been honest in your cause. But you have ill-health; you need to urgently take care of yourself.

“It is agreed unanimously that there is high degree of environmental degradation and high degree of injustice. We must come together to find a permanent solution that would promote the emancipation of our people.

Responding, Dokubo thanked Tinubu for his support, pledging to be steadfast in the quest to salvage the people of the area, saying “I cannot be free when my people are still in bondage”.

Dokubo recalled Tinubu’s humanitarian gesture towards his family while he was in detention and apologized to the former governor for turning down some of his offers.

“I want to thank you for the love you showed to my family. When I was in detention, you provided accommodation for my wife and children in Lagos and you paid my children’s school fees.

“We have never met but you showed me love. I am sorry that I asked my wife not take up the accommodation. It is not out of disrespect.

“It is only proper that my family remain within our locality to continue the struggle.

“If they had moved to Lagos, people will say they fled and the struggle would have been defeated”, the militant leader said.

He emphasized that “no amount of intimidation, detention, or killings would make me abandon this cause”.

Earlier, the facilitator of the visit, Prince Tonye Princewill, who was the gubernatorial candidate of the Action Congress (AC) in Rivers state during the last April polls, urged the duo of Tinubu and Dokubo to build a common front in other to achieve democratic goals for the citizenry.

“You have both faced intimidation, you have both been oppressed by a dictatorial government and your coming together to face a common enemy will make Nigeria a better place to live in”, Princewill said.

As Other Companies Flee, KBR Opens a Nigeria Office in Lagos

HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--KBR (NYSE:KBR) announced today the founding of KBR Nigeria Ltd. in Lagos, Nigeria. The establishment of KBR Nigeria Ltd. will enable KBR to more fully support its Nigerian customers and further its commitment to meeting the countrys goals for increased local content.

KBR has a 30-year history working in Nigeria and a continuous presence for the last 15 years, which includes ongoing EPC work for the countrys major LNG projects and for its first GTL facility. KBR has additionally performed work for a number of Nigerias refining, ammonia, and onshore and offshore oil and gas production and processing projects.

The Nigeria operation will enable KBR to build local support for its clients while ensuring close coordination with its global engineering centers. Our decision to establish KBR Nigeria Ltd. is strongly aligned with our commitment to helping develop local capabilities and delivering world-class projects in Nigeria and in all of the places where we serve our clients, said John Rose, executive vice president, KBR. KBR Nigeria Ltd. will allow us to more fully integrate local engineering talent while maintaining close coordination with our global execution centers to support our ongoing projects.

The joint venture team of KBR, JGC, Technip and Snamprogetti, was recently awarded the project specification/front end engineering and design (FEED) contract for the Nigeria LNG (NLNG) SevenPlus project, to be constructed at Bonny Island, Nigeria. NLNG is a partnership of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC), Shell, Total and ENI. The award of the FEED is part of a competitive bid for the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract, which is expected to be awarded by the end of 2007. The joint venture of KBR, JGC, Technip and Snamprogetti was chosen to design and build the first six trains for NLNG, beginning in 1989. Trains one through five are complete, and train six is under construction and is expected to be completed on schedule by the end of 2007.

KBR is a global engineering, construction and services company supporting the energy, petrochemicals, government services and civil infrastructure sectors. We offer our wide range of services through our Energy and Chemicals (E&C), Government and Infrastructure (G&I), and Ventures business segments. For more information, visit www.kbr.com.


Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Nigeria Security Update #1 190607



11 Soldiers Dead, 16 AGIP Workers Held as "POWs" (This Day)

The Federal Government yesterday ordered the deployment of more troops to Ogboinbiri community in Southern Ijaw local government area of Bayelsa State. This followed the humiliating defeat suffered in the hands of militants by men of the Nigerian Army at the Ogboinbiri flow station belonging to Italian oil company, Nigeria Agip Oil Company (NAOC) on Sunday.

In Rivers, the Deputy Governor of the State, Engineer Tele Ikuru, lamented yesterday that over 80 percent of businesses in Port Harcourt had closeddown over the attacks by youths on their staff.

The decision to deploy the troops follows the take-over of the flow station by the militants who reportedly killed over 11 soldiers in the battle for the control of the facility which produces over 40,000 barrels of oil per day. There was no official confirmation of the casualty figures.

THISDAY checks revealed that the eight gun boats loaded with over 200 soldiers left Warri and Yenagoa for Ogboinbiri yesterday in the bid to recover the facility and retrieve the bodies of soldiers reportedly killed and those held as Prisoners of War (PoW) by the militants who are still occupying the flow station.

Meanwhile, NAOC has raised alarm that 16 of its workers working aboard the flow station have been held as “prisoners of war” by the militants. Agip said there were 51 soldiers and 24 local workers aboard the facility when it was over run by militants on Sunday.

The men who are indigenes of the area may have been caught in the crossfire between the soldiers and the militants.

At press time, it could not be ascertained if any of the workers was killed or wounded during the eight-hour battle that dislodged the soldiers from the facility.

The 16 were left by NAOC to take care of the flow station following the evacuation of the facility company soon after nine militants were killed by soldiers last week Tuesday.

Even as more troops have been deployed to the spot, the owners of the facility are said to have pleaded with the government to engage the boys in dialogue instead resorting to a military option.

The pleading of the company, a source said, was predicated on the premise that other facilities owned by the company may be attacked by the boys.

Men of the Joint Task Force (JTF) had, Tuesday last week, killed nine militants at the Ogboinbiri flow station. Angered at the action, the militants reportedly wrote a letter promising to engage the JTF in a battle. In the reprisal mission which took place on Sunday, the militants had successfully dislodged the soldiers from the facility.

In Rivers, the Deputy Governor has called for intervention of local communities to put hostage-taking in check. According to him, the situation has accentuated the unemployment problem of the state as well as slowed down the economic growth of the state.

Ikuru stated this while playing host to the Eminent Peoples Forum in Port Harcourt where he insisted that hostage taking and other allied criminal activities were exerting a negative pressure on the intention of the state to grow a robust economy.

“Rivers State has become a carcass of itself; go to Trans-Amadi and you will see that about 80 percent of companies have closed down, not because of their inability to manage their business properly but because of the demonic activities of our youths working in concert with those from outside,” Ikuru said.

The Deputy Governor told the group that some of the contracts that were awarded by the State were yet to commence because of the fear for the safety of the expatriates engaged to execute the contracts.

He particularly regretted the inability of the contractors handling the Trans Kalabari highway, drainage projects, rehabilitation of the Port Harcourt International Airport and water reticulation projects in the state who had to pull out of site owing to threat of kidnap of their workers.

To him, the problem has become so hydra headed that it required a multi-dimensional approach which he assured that on the part of government, they were putting together a team to work out modalities of reintegrating the restive you-ths into normal society.

He said the closest example of avoidable problem hostage taking was taking manifested in the stoppage of production by Indorama which had employed many Niger Delta youths before they were forced to close down because of incessant kidnap of their staff.

Earlier in his speech, Chairman of the Forum, Chief Philitus Warmate expressed the readiness of his group to address the issue and commended the federal government for the release of Mujahid Dokubo Asari which he said would help to stem restiveness.


Chevron Forced to Cut Production (Media Reports)

The invasion of western Niger Delta Abiteye flow station has forced Chevron Nigeria Limited to again cut 42,000 barrels per day of crude oil production yesterday.

The joint venture company, Nigeria National Petroleum Company (NNPC)/Chevron Joint Venture confirmed the attack, saying at least 20 gun men invaded the station on Sunday.

"The situation is presently under control, as the company will continue to closely monitor the area and ensure tighter security," the company's Spokes-man, Michael Barrett said.

In another development, gunmen attacked a flow station operated by Eni, mother company of Agip, holding workers and some military men hostage.

Last month, the company lost 42,000 barrels per day (bpd), as villagers carrying sticks and machetes staged a protest against the company's oil production facility, forcing it to halt its output.

The attack on its Abiteye flow station, which feeds the 160,000 bpd Escravos export terminal, was said to be as a result of delay in compensation for an oil spill in the area.

However, an eyewitness who confirmed the incident said there was a community protest, with people carrying sticks and machetes, but the place was full of government security forces drafted in over the weekend.

According to the company Spokesperson, Femi Odumabo, peace talks have already began and the company expects the crisis to be resolved as soon as possible, he said, adding that community leaders and elders have been very supportive of the company and are already intervening to see that the issue is brought under control.

Spills, which is a source of constant friction between oil companies and communities, is said to be caused by criminals who illegally tap oil from pipelines.


Militants Demand Money for Hostages But Would Take Recharge Cards

The armed gang that abducted three Indians and a Pole in Sapele, Delta State, last Friday has demanded for N170 million ransom for their release.

Nigerian Tribune gathered that the kidnappers called the chief accountant of the rubber firm that engaged the services of the foreigners on the phone in the early hours of Monday and demanded for the huge sum.

A security source disclosed that it became obvious that the kidnappers did not belong to any of the groups that claimed to be fighting for the Niger Delta cause when they also requested for recharge cards from the accountant.

“One of the kidnappers called the chief accountant of the rubber firm with the mobile phone of one of their captives and demanded for N170 million.

“When the chief accountant said he could not release such amount without the approval of the management, they then requested that recharge cards be sent to them immediately”, the sources disclosed.

It was further learnt that the militants were so desperate that they were prepared to release the hostages last night provided they could make some money from their crime.

“In fact, they want some little money out of this particular case. It is like they don’t have money to continue with the business,” the source said.


Villagers Occupy Oil Production Facility (Reuters)

Hundreds of angry villagers chased workers away from an oil-transfer facility Monday in restive southern Nigeria and occupied the premises in hopes of forcing payment from the oil industry, officials said.

Elsewhere in the Niger Delta, gunmen were holding some two dozen Nigerian workers and security forces hostage at another flow station that had been overrun Sunday.

Authorities hadn't been able to access the interior of that facility and had no information on any casualties among the hostages, said Brig. Gen. Lawrence Ngubane, a military commander in the Niger Delta.

He said the invaders were threatening to blow up the station if security forces came near. Gunmen and troops battled in the area last week, leaving several gunmen dead.

ENI SpA, whose subsidiary Agip runs the facility, confirmed that the installation had been overrun but gave no information on whether oil had stopped running through it. Agip officials in Nigeria had no immediate comment.

In the protest occupation that flared Monday, rough estimates showed nearly 1,000 people at the flow station outside the main city of Warri, said Ngubane.

The villagers want money they say they're owed by U.S.-based Chevron Corp., which runs the facility, for restitution after an oil spill in their area, he said. Chevron officials weren't immediately available for comment.

Hundreds of flow stations dot the Niger Delta where Nigerian crude is pumped. The stations connect the tubes leading from wells into larger pipeline arteries that carry the crude oil to export terminals.

Protest occupations of oil facilities are common in the region, which remains deeply poor despite the vast natural bounty.

Nearly two years of spiraling violence in the oil-producing southern Niger Delta have cut Nigeria's crude output by about one quarter, sending oil prices higher in overseas markets.

New President Umaru Yar'Adua has said the crisis is one of the most-pressing matters he faces, and a top militant leader was released on bail last week, marking a breakthrough in the conflict pitting militants against security forces.

The militants are pressing for more government-controlled, oil-industry funds for their region, which remains desperately poor despite its vast natural bounty.

But their stepped-up attacks have helped degrade overall security conditions in the vast region of creeks and swamps, and criminal gangs who kidnap foreigners now operate with apparent impunity. Some 200 foreign workers in the region have been kidnapped since December 2005, including more than 100 this year alone.

In addition, tension over local grievances -- such as a community accusing an oil company of failing to make good on promises of financial help -- sometimes results in attacks or kidnappings.

Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer and one of the top overseas suppliers to the United States.

In the capital Monday, labor unions called for a general nationwide strike to protest a government price hike on automobile fuel. The strike is to begin Wednesday, and the unions said it would continue until the increase is repealed.

Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo ordered the 15 percent fuel-price hike in the last days of his administration, which ended May 29 with President Umaru Yar'Adua's inauguration.

Nationwide Strike Averted? (This Day)

After a late-night meeting between the Federal Government and labour leaders and civil society groups, government has agreed to reduce by N5 the pump price of petrol from the present N75 per litre. It sold for N65 before the increase.

Government also offered to suspend the implementation of the increase in Value Added Tax (VAT) from 5 per cent to 10 per cent. The prices of diesel and kerosene are also to sell at old prices.

As for the controversial sale of Kaduna and Port Harcourt Refineries, government has directed the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) to go into further negotiations with labour on how to resolve the issue.

It was also learnt that government pledged that the 15 per cent salary increase demanded by labour would take effect from January 2007.

These were the highglights of the discussions between the federal government and labour leaders in Abuja yesterday, THISDAY learnt last night.

Although there was no official statement last night on the new dispensation, labour leaders said they would meet this morning to consider the latest offer by government and decide on the next line of action.

A senior official of the NLC told THISDAY last night that Labour was not satisfied that fuel price was not reverted to the original price. “We are not happy with that aspect,” he said, arguing that the unions were hoping to capitalise on the “legitimacy crisis” of the Yar’Adua government to get a better bargain as the government could not afford a major crisis at this stage of its life.

The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigerian (IPMAN), however, called off its five-day old strike, which had virtually paralysed economic activities.

Negotiations between government and labour had earlier broken down following which the two major labour unions in the country - Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC) - yesterday called on Nigerians to embark on an indefinite strike beginning from tomorrow.

But the FG in a response to labour four-point demand issued by Mr. Olusegun Adeniyi, Spokesman to President Umaru Yar’Adua, said: “Having taken note of the decision by the NLC, TUC and JAF to declare an indefinite general strike as from Wednesday, June 20, 2007 if their four point-demand is not met, Government held talks this evening with their representatives and presented a formal response to the demands.

“The meeting ended with the unions promising to study the response and make a fresh position known by tomorrow when it is hoped that the threat of a nationwide strike will be lifted in the interest of all Nigerians.

“Government wishes to assure all Nigerians that it is well aware of the hardships being currently experienced by ordinary people in the country and is fully committed to doing everything possible to improve their living conditions.

“This resolve was underscored by President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua in his inaugural address on May 29 this year when he said: ‘Let us join together to ease the pains of today while working for the gains of tomorrow.’”

In its demand, the organized labour had asked government to revert the pump price of petrol from N75 per litre to N65, VAT from 10 per cent to its original 5 per cent, implement the 15 per cent increase in salary and review the sale of Kaduna and Port Harcourt refineries.

On its part, the government had asked for more time to consider the demands.

The pump price of petrol and VAT rate were increased by former President Olusegun Obasanjo on the eve of his handing over to the new President Yar’Adua.

Addressing newsmen in Abuja early yesterday at the end of a joint National Executive Council meeting of NLC, TUC and Civil Society groups, the NLC President, Comrade Abdulwaheed Omar, had said the coalition would with effect from Wednesday June 20, 2007 embark on an indefinite general strike and mass protests throughout the country to draw positive attention of government to their demands.

But shortly after the press conference, the State Security Service (SSS) invited TUC President, Comrade Peter Esele, for a chat.

THISDAY findings revealed that it was just a routine chat and an “indirect call for dialogue” to continue with the Federal Government to find a lasting solution to the impasse.

It was gathered that government had started making frantic moves to stave off the strike.
Presidency sources said government had directed its negotiating team to engage the labour and its allies even before the rescheduled meeting date of Thursday.

Omar said Labour's latest action was precipitated by the untold hardship and suffering Nigerians had been subjected to in recent times following price increases in petrol and VAT and government's apparent reluctance in listening to the cries of the people.

He said the suffering of Nigerians had been compounded by the imposition of additional burden of price increases of petrol and kerosene, a 100% increase in VAT and the suspension of the 15 per cent salary increase in the country meant to cushion the effects of biting hunger and deepening mass poverty.

"Nigerians can no longer continue to suffer in the midst o plenty. They no longer want to live under sub-human conditions. So with effect from Wednesday 20th June 2007, an indefinite general strike and mass protests by Nigerians will commence," he had said.
He said Labour had tried all in its power to let the government see reason and ally with the Nigerian people rather than imprison itself in the anti-people and pro-poverty policies and programmes.

The NLC President however regretted that government was rather desperately trying to claim “paternity” of the immediate past President Obasanjo regime's punishing policies.
According to him, as part of the implementation of the industrial action, all offices, ports, banks, petrol stations and business premises were to be shut down, while all schools, airports, official and semi official business premises were to be closed down. Vehicles, particularly commercial ones, were to off the roads.

He said the strike would be peaceful but that any bank, fuel station, factory or office that defied the strike directive would be “responsible” for its action.

Omar said contrary to speculations, the strike and protests would not be called off until government addressed positively the unions’ four-point demand.

At the press conference which had Esele and NUPENG President Mr. Peter Akpatason, in attendance, the coalition advised parents and guardians not to send their children to school as teachers had given a firm commitment that they would not teach.

"School children should therefore not be allowed to roam streets that may be unsafe," they warned.

Justifying their declaration of strike, the labour unions said efforts to get the Federal Government to reason with them did not yield any fruit, adding that instead the authorities stuck to its gun.

"We wrote a four-page letter to President Yar'Adua on June 1st articulating the feeling and interests of the populace and asking for succour.

"Also in the last two weeks, we have held formal meetings with government teams led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation. Unfortunately, these meetings have not been fruitful," Omar said.

The communiqué jointly signed by Omar, Esele and Chairman Joint Action Forum, Dr. Dipo Fashina, accused the management of NNPC of fueling the crisis through the provocative statement it issued on the petrol price hike.

According to the coalition, "NNPC arrogantly went on air to say that fuel prices would rise to N230 per litre and that even if Nigerians went on strike and mass protests for ten years nothing would change.

"We have refused to be provoked because we discern that the management of NNPC plans to derail the democratic process in the country," the group said.

Asari Wants Petroleum Minister to be from Delta (Business Day)


Speaking to newsmen in Port Harcourt on his arrival from Abuja at the weekend Asari reiterated his call for a sovereign national conference where the basis of the country’s nationhood would be discoursed by all the ethnic nationalities that make up the country.

Asari who was granted bail last week by an Abuja High Court says he is not aware of any conditions surrounding his release.

An Abuja High Court last week granted Asari bail on health grounds with several conditions attached but the NDPVF leader said he was unaware of such conditions.

He arrived the Port Harcourt air force base around 11am Saturday aboard a chattered plane of the Associated Airlines and went straight to the home of a prominent politician in Rivers state.

Asari had earlier after he was granted bail by the court condemned the act of hostage taking and kidnap of expatriates workers in the Niger Delta describing it as evil.

Large crowd of people turned out to catch a glimpse of Asari causing a traffic hold up at the Air force base axis of the Ph-Aba expressway.

However many of the admirers were disappointed as Asari could not wait to address them but was taken straight to the home of a prominent politician in Rivers state.

But in an apparent show of appreciation to the federal government for the release of Asari the militants also yesterday announced an end to all hostage taking and kidnapping of expatriates.

Ten Idians staff of Indorama-new owners of the Eleme Petrochemical Company Limited including their Managing Director who were abducted about two weeks ago were released to the Rivers state governor Celestine Omehia, Saturday afternoon.

Ateke Tom, leader of the Niger Delta Vigilnte afaction of the militant groups in a statement issued at the weekend offered to collaborate with efforts at ending kidnap of expatriates in the Niger Delta.

Crime Breaks Out Again in Lagos Markets (Daily Trust)

For the sixth time in three months confusion enveloped some popular markets and motor parks in Lagos last Wednesday following the resurgence of fight between gangs of area boys.

Our reporters who witnessed the clashes at the ever busy Oshodi market noted some supporters of one M.C. Musiliu, believed to be a notorious Oshodi gang leader, stormed the market, brandishing cutlasses, knives and other dangerous weapons in a bid to take control from another group.

"There was pandemonium as traders and commuters ran helter-skelter for dear lives. In the process, goods especially, perishable items worth thousands of naira were destroyed", says Muftau Adegoke, a resident who witnessed the clash.

Another eyewitness who identified himself as Sumaila Ade told Oodua Trust that the fighting was between NURTW members seeking to upstage one another in the motor parks.

He disclosed that the confusion was caused by supporters of the factional chairman of NURTW in the state, Mr. Saka Saula who attempted to take over a motor park belonging to the opposing faction in the area.

"They came with cutlasses, guns, knives and bottles and started attacking people. So people were running helter-skelter to escape being killed," Sumaila narrated.

Investigations also revealed that the fighting which had spread to Onipanu, Yaba and Ojota in the last two months was however contained by anti-riot policemen from the state police command.

The cops who stormed Oshodi and other battle grounds in personnel armour carrier dispersed the combatants and took control of the affected areas. Before then, the hoodlums had unleashed terror on innocent traders and destroyed shops.

The anti-riot policemen restored normalcy to the area as at the time of filing this report and confirmed that some miscreants were arrested in connection with the clashes.

Fighting broke out in the area three weeks ago when opponents of M.C. Musiliu attempted to dislodge him from the park. Traders lost goods worth thousands of naira as their shops were set ablaze by the rampaging area boys. Vehicles were also set ablaze during the gang war.

Following the constant gang wars in Idumota and other parts of Lagos Island, residents, now live in fear, investigations has revealed. Worse still, residents of the areas where the gang wars have become a regular feature now make sure they are in their respective homes as early as 8pm while drinking joints close as early as 7.30pm, Oodua Trust learnt.

Also, car owners have been moving their vehicles out of Lagos due to the fear of vandalisation, while those whose vehicles were damaged have vowed not to venture near Lagos Island again.

The first son of the late Ayinde Bakare, Shina Ayinde Bakare, who recently fell victim to the rampaging social miscreants, had his car, a Datsun saloon car, badly damaged.

Ayinde Bakare said: "The daily clash among the area boys is very disturbing and if something drastic is not done, they may start entering our houses to kill us. Each time they clash, people and cars are always their target."

Another victim, whose Mercedes Benz Jeep was destroyed during one of the clashes, vowed never to buy another one until the situation improves.

"Imagine, they perpetrate all these atrocities without being checked by the policemen. The situation is so bad. The first time my car was damaged. I lost my mobile phone during another attack," he lamented.

On Monday, Lagos state governor, Babatunde Fashola set up a twelve-man committee headed by former Inspector-General of Police, Musiliu Smith to fashion out ways of reducing crime in the state.