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: Nigeria
Nigerian regime loses legal dispute over oil
By Trevor Johnson and Chris Talbot
18 October 2002
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Nigeria has lost its eight-year legal battle with neighbouring
Cameroon over the Bakassi Peninsula, an area rich in offshore
oil and gas deposits. The International Court of Justice at The
Hague ruled against Nigerias claim over the land that dates
back to a 1913 deal between the colonial powers, Britain and Germany,
giving the peninsula to Cameroon.
According to the Nigerian newspaper This Day, Cameroon
will gain reserves of at least 100 million barrels of oil and
four trillion cubic feet of gas. Although this only represents
about 0.3 percent and 2 percent respectively of Nigerias
total reserves, in a country entirely dependent on oil wealth
it is seen as a serious loss of face by the military elite.
The loss of reserves is coupled with a potentially serious
military dispute over access to the Atlantic Ocean. Major oil
corporations including ExxonMobil, Shell and TotalFinaElf are
concerned about the settlement, having oil fields in the disputed
region or terminals where ships will have to pass through Cameroon
waters that are at present patrolled by the Nigerian navy. This
Day reported the Nigerian counsels submission to the
International Court: Can Nigeria seriously contemplate having
a major part of her fleet passing down a narrow stretch of water
on a regular basis under the guns of Cameroon? Following
the court decision Nigeria dispatched warships carrying troops
and heavy artillery to the Nigerian side of the disputed region.
Further conflict in the area is also possible with the tiny
island country of Sao Tomé and Principe, which has apparently
repudiated its agreement with Nigeria over the joint exploitation
of waters in the Gulf of Guinea holding an estimated four billion
barrels of oil.
The ratcheting up of oil disputes follows the increasing interest
of the United States in West African oil as an alternative source
of supply as it prepares for war in the Middle East. Nigeria is
under pressure from the oil corporations and the Bush administration
to accept the legal ruling and avoid a move to military conflict
that could easily bring in France supporting its former colony
Cameroon. This Day quote a Nigerian official saying, in
the event of a war, France will most likely back Cameroon, Nigeria
may take it out on [French-owned] Elf Petroleum Nigeria Limited.
With war breaking out in Côte dIvoire and conflict
continuing in Liberia, the western powers are concerned about
the stability of the entire region.
The Hague judgement can only add to the acute problems of President
Olusegun Obasanjo, who faces elections in April 2003 after four
years of increasingly unstable civilian rule. This month it was
announced that two more peoplea couple convicted of committing
adulteryface being sentenced to death by stoning under Sharia
law that is being imposed in the northern predominantly Muslim
states. There are now at least five death-by-stoning cases, although
none of the accused has yet been executed. The implementation
of this barbaric punishment by the rulers of the northern states
is not only designed to brutally suppress the local population,
but also to whip up religious and ethnic conflict.
Behind the move to Sharia are such former military rulers of
Nigeria as Generals Ibrahim Babangida and Abduksalami Abubakar.
The northern ruling elite has financed extreme Islamic organisations
and gangs of youths are being mobilised against Christian minorities
in the region. So far 12 states have adopted Sharia and there
have been ethnic clashes in which at least 6,000 people have been
killed. Obasanjo has declared Sharia to be against the Nigerian
constitution, but has failed to take any action against it.
Obasanjo had some credibility when he came to poweralthough
a former military leader, he was imprisoned under the regime of
General Abachabut has been shown to be unwilling to oppose
the northern generals. Rather, he has relied upon the army maintaining
order in ethnic conflicts by heavy-handed suppression and bringing
in military rule in several of Nigerias 36 states. He backed
the army when they massacred several hundred civilians from the
ethnic Tiv grouping in the central region of Nigeria last year
after disputes over land, and the killing by the army of at least
400 civilians in the town of Odi in the Delta region, November
1999, to suppress local opposition to the oil corporations.
It is becoming ever more difficult to hold together Nigerias
numerous regional elites. Under the decades of military
rule preceding Obasanjos election in 1999, religious and
ethnic conflict was suppressed, especially following the attempt
of the mainly Igbo south eastern region to form the breakaway
state of Biafra in the 1966-70 civil war. During the Cold War
period the western powers were prepared to allow the generals
to siphon off some of the oil wealth of Nigeria to maintain their
corrupt rule. As Obasanjo has attempted to impose IMF privatisation
measures, cutting back the federal funding to the regions, there
have been growing conflicts between the local elites.
Worsening divisions
Evidence of the worsening divisions between ruling factions
is provided by the numerous political assassinations taking place,
some of them of high-ranking figures. In December 2001 Justice
Minister Bola Ige was assassinatedalmost certainly because
of his opposition to the northern military domination of Nigeria.
In September, Isyaku Mohammed, deputy chairman of a new northern-based
party, the United Nigeria Peoples Party, was assassinated.
Another recent political assassination was Nigerian Bar Association
chairman for the state of Anambra Barnabas Igwe and his wife on
September 1, 2002. Igwe had severely criticised the state government
and its governor Chinwoke Mbadinuju, accusing them of filching
money that should have been used to pay local government workers.
Many suspect the state government of being behind the killings.
Discontent with Obasanjo among Nigerias political elite
has surfaced with an attempt to impeach him that began two months
ago. A group of MPs, including some from Obasanjos own ruling
Peoples Democratic Party and influential figures such as
Farouk Lawan, chairman of the House Information Committee, have
called on Obasanjo to resign or face impeachment. The charges
against Obasanjo include the use of the army on several occasions
against civilians.
However, the main issue is resentment over distribution of
government finances. It is claimed that Obasanjo has withheld
money from parliament, oil revenues are not properly accounted
for, and that there has been a failure to fight widespread corruption.
The impeachment process, which is likely to drag on for months
and unlikely to force Obasanjo out of office, is designed to politically
damage him ahead of next years elections. Obasanjo has now
called in former military ruler General Gowon and former President
Shagari to assist him in resolving the standoff with the National
Assembly.
There is widespread public anger against the Obasanjo regime,
as illusions that civilian rule would bring prosperity and greater
democracy have been shattered. Despite producing over two million
barrels of oil per day, Nigerias GDP per capita was $854
in 1999, a figure in the lowest third of the sub-Saharan countries,
and falling as population growth outstrips growth in GDP. According
to the World Bank, 44 percent of Nigerians live in absolute poverty,
defined as a daily income of $1 per day or less. Income has declined
on average by 1.5 percent a year for the last 25 years. At the
same time, the increases in fuel prices imposed by the regimeas
demanded by the International Monetary Fundhave driven up
the cost of living. According to World Health Organisation figures
of May 2000, life expectancy in Nigeria is only 38.3 years. Only
61 percent of the urban population has access to sanitation and
63 percent has access to water.
The recent voter registration ended in chaos on September 22.
Many registration stations were left without forms and long queues
of people were turned away unregistered. An estimated 60 million
Nigerians were expected to register, and the Independent National
Electoral Commission (INEC) said it had distributed 70 million
registration forms. In the event, many of the forms went missing.
This is widely believed to be due to corrupt politicians buying
the forms, with the intention of stuffing ballot boxes during
the next years elections. As a result, up to 40 percent
of the population could be left without a vote. Besides the lack
of sufficient registration forms, other problems included registration
stations that moved without notice or closed early, stations that
claimed to be signing up voters more quickly than was humanly
possible, while little or no registration at all was taking place
in some densely populated areas.
The scale and openness of this vote rigging suggests that next
years elections will be even more fraudulent than those
of 1999. At that time the western powers were prepared to overlook
widespread ballot rigging and the fact that the previous military
regime limited which parties and candidates were allowed to stand.
It seems unlikely that the next election will be exposed as a
fraud by the international observers and the media, even though
the scale of corruption is already much greater than that in Zimbabwe.
Obasanjo has consistently promoted the interests of the US
and western oil companies. The US has been training the Nigerian
military as a professional army, as well as providing it with
funds, to move into trouble spots throughout the region. Obasanjos
remit has been to open Nigeria up to untrammelled exploitation,
push up the price of oil and petrol inside Nigeria towards world
market rates while exceeding OPEC quotas and bringing down global
prices, privatise the state sector, and drive down the proportion
of wealth going to the working class and rural poor. He has not
been able to push ahead with privatisation as far as the western
powers would have liked because of resistance from regional powerbrokers
and opposition from the mass of the population. But for the time
being, despite the instability and centrifugal forces inside Nigeria,
Obasanjos rule is seen by the US as the best means of maintaining
a semblance of regional stability and thus western interests in
West Africa as a whole.
See Also:
Threat of Middle East war spurs
grab for West African oil
[20 August 2002]
Nigeria: Unions call off general
strike against fuel price increases
[25 January 2002]
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