|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
More than 250 feared dead in Nigerian pipeline explosion
By Trevor Johnson
14 July 2000
Use
this version to print
A damaged oil pipeline gushing fuel exploded in southern Nigeria
early Monday morning, killing more than 250 people. Many of the
dead were schoolchildren, whose uniforms could be discerned on
some of their charred remains.
The explosion took place near the village of Adeje with a population
of 5,000, not far from the port city of Warri in the oil-rich
Niger Delta. Despite its proximity to a city, it took 24 hours
for fire crews to arrive at the scene. Fire fighters had to extinguish
a further smaller blaze at the same spot on Wednesday.
Such is the frequency of fire outbreaks on pipelines in the
Warri area that fire fighters have practically given up any effort
to quell them. The usual practice is to cut off the flow of oil
in the pipes and let the flames burn out.
Sometimes the pipelines are damaged by militant activists trying
to force the government and oil companies to compensate local
communities for land use and pollution. More often, villagers
break open the pipeline and collect the fuel either to sell on
the roadside or to power cheap generators and other motors. Villagers
said the Warri pipeline had been punctured for this purpose by
street vendors on Sunday night.
By Monday local people had also begun collecting fuel from
the damaged pipeline. Many of the dead were still clutching fuel
buckets they had been using. Some had attempted to outrun the
flames from the explosion but had been unable to get away, as
the fire destroyed fields and buildings in a 2 kilometre radius.
Mass graves have been dug to bury the dead.
Villagers said many of those who had survived the inferno had
gone into hiding in order to avoid being prosecuted for theft.
When we heard the explosion and saw the raging fire we considered
it as normal because the breaking of pipelines and siphoning of
fuel is happening all the time, said Adeje resident Monday
Ochuko. But when people started screaming we rushed there
and saw the bodies, he said, adding that he had taken his
family to Warri for fear of a police roundup of suspected fuel
thieves.
Statements by Nigerian government officials emphasised how
widespread the fuel theft has become. The tanker drivers
puncture the pipeline and pump gasoline into their vehicles and
then drive off, leaving fuel gushing out. Villagers then come
in with their buckets and jerry cans, one said.
It is a testimony both to the scale of poverty in Nigeria and
to how little the people of the region benefit from its rich natural
resources that so many risk their lives regularly to gain fuel.
For many there is little other means of making a living. The practice
has triggered numerous explosions in the past. In 1998, 1,000
people died in an explosion at the nearby village of Jesse.
In addition, whilst Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer,
its inhabitants suffer from shortages of petroleum products. The
four refineries in Nigeria have been run down under successive
administrations and nearly all of the oil is now exported and
refined elsewhere. The Warri pipeline owned by state-run Nigerian
National Petroleum Corp (NNPC) was originally built to carry crude
oil to a refinery in the northern town of Kaduna. It had to be
modified later to transport refined products, following a prolonged
shutdown of the refinery for repairs. The Kaduna refinery once
had a throughput of 110,000 barrels per day.
Doyin Okupe, a spokesman for President Olusegun Obasanjo, spoke
contemptuously after the explosion, which he described as an avoidable
tragedy. Pipeline vandalism is driven by poverty and
greed, Okupe said adding, they know the risks.
Nigeria has a network of more than 3,125 miles of pipelines criss-crossing
the oil-producing country. Obasanjo, who came to office in May
1999, has set up a special task force of soldiers and police backed
by helicopters to protect the pipelines.
See Also:
Nigeria in midst of strike wave
[6 July 2000]
Nigeria edges towards civil
war
[4 March 2000]
Who is responsible
for the oil explosion in Nigeria?
[21 October 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |