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WSWS : News
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: Nigeria
Nigeria's fuel protests gather support
By Our correspondent
23 March 2001
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Workers and students in Nigeria took to the streets on March
20, at the start of a nation-wide protest against a rise in petrol
prices. Several thousand protesters marched through the northern
Nigerian city of Kano to the residence of its Governor, Musa Kwankwaso,
to denounce President Olusegun Obasanjo's plan to deregulate petrol
prices.
Anti-riot police deployed armoured cars in an attempt to intimidate
the demonstrators. "Police positioned a tank in front of
the Governor's residence and there were more than 10 patrol vehicles
stationed nearby," said a witness in Kano. Demonstrators
torched the gubernatorial residence last year during similar protests,
triggered by Obasanjo's decision to hike gasoline prices by 50
percent.
The weeklong campaign began in some of Nigeria's 36 states
one day prior to a major rally planned in the commercial capital
Lagos. Tuesday's protest in Kano passed peacefully, despite being
tailed by police in armoured cars. "We did not vote for Obasanjo
to deregulate fuel prices," said a large placard carried
by the demonstrators.
The trade unions are attempting to turn the campaign into a
protest against the smuggling of oil products into neighbouring
states, rather than against deregulation per se. A trade union
official leading the campaign said, "Our problem is not deregulation.
Government has done nothing to put and end to illegal diversion
of petroleum products by privileged citizens."
A year ago, a general strike against an attempt to raise prices
by 50 percent forced the government into a partial retreat. Earlier
this week, Obasanjo addressed a graduation ceremony at the Nigerian
Defence Academy in northern Kaduna; referring to the fuel protest
he said that subsidies made no economic sense and that deregulation
"was a matter of when, not if".
The government says deregulation and ending subsidies are necessary
to end long-running fuel shortages, blamed largely on inefficient
and run down domestic refineries.
Obasanjo aims at the complete deregulation of Nigeria's fuel
sector, ending the government monopoly on refining and importing
fuel, and gradually lifting the subsidies that currently give
Nigerians some of the cheapest petrol in the world. The government
says that until this is done, chronic petrol shortages will continue
because distributors will always be tempted to sell petrol on
the black market or smuggle it abroad.
The authorities have tried to frighten ordinary Nigerians with
warnings of looming chaos if the protests go ahead at a time when
tension and disenchantment are spreading across the country of
over 110 million people because of a worsening energy crisis.
The unions have come to the head of the protests, arguing that
deregulation of fuel prices will drive up costs elsewhere, damaging
the economy. In Katsina town, 3,000 people packed an anti-deregulation
rally in the business district. Police cordoned off the area and
shops were closed. "The government should understand that
Nigerians have been living under excruciating poverty and with
non-functioning infrastructure," Nigeria Labour Congress
Katsina chairman, Umaru Mohammed Bokari, told the cheering crowd.
In an effort to prevent the protests spreading, the government
has asked for talks with union leaders in the capital, Abuja,
scheduled for today or tomorrow.
See Also:
Clinton's Nigeria visit
seeks to strengthen US influence in Africa
[1 September 2000]
Nigerian unions concluding
separate agreements over minimum wage
[27 July 2000]
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