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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Who is responsible for the oil explosion in Nigeria?
By Jerry White
21 October 1998
Several hundred bodies, charred beyond recognition, were buried
in a mass grave in southern Nigeria Monday after the explosion
this weekend that killed at least 500 villagers. Many of the victims
were scavenging for oil from a leaking pipeline. The tragedy occurred
in Apawor, 180 miles southeast of Lagos, in the oil-rich Niger
delta.
A nurse in Warri, where most of the victims were taken, said
many of the dead were women and children. Some were still clutching
bottles, plastic cups, funnels and cans they were using to collect
fuel from the pipeline, which had been leaking for three days.
The burnt body of one woman was found with her dead baby still
strapped to her back. Many of the other victims were farmers and
villagers sleeping in their homes when the explosion occurred.
Witnesses say people had been soaked by the gushing oil and
were engulfed in flames when the fuel ignited. Others were trapped
in a ditch where a pool of petrol had collected. A patch of land
the size of a soccer field was charred as the fire followed the
flow of volatile liquid.
Poorly equipped hospitals and health centers in the remote
region were inundated with the dead and injured and were forced
to turn many away. The death toll is expected to rise above 500
as many of the injured are not expected to survive.
Nigeria's military ruler, General Abulsalami Abubakar, visited
the site Monday and said no compensation would be paid to the
relatives of the victims. He declared that the damage to the pipeline
was an act of sabotage, echoing the claims of representatives
of the Pipeline and Products Marketing Company (PPMC), the state-owned
firm that operates the pipeline.
Company officials said that the fire was started by "tools
used by saboteurs." But other reports say it was ignited
by someone lighting a cigarette, or by a spark from a motorcycle.
The disaster highlights the staggering social crisis in Nigeria.
The country is the world's sixth largest producer of crude oil,
with an output of about 2 million barrels a day. While this has
produced huge profits for multinational corporations and the ruling
military clique in Lagos, ordinary Nigerians face perpetual fuel
shortages.
Most of the country's oil is exported, generating 90 percent
of Nigeria's foreign exchange revenues. The group around General
Sani Abacha, who held power until his death last June, siphoned
off millions of dollars from the oil industry, causing vast disruptions
in oil production and refining. This has continued under General
Abubakar.
Reports of "sabotage" have been growing since the
country's poorly maintained refineries began falling behind the
demand for petrol. Long lines in towns and cities are commonplace
and the lack of petrol, except on the black market, leads to hundreds
of vehicles waiting at filling stations to fuel up, sometimes
for days. Under such conditions, a leak attracts hundreds of Nigerians
seeking free fuel, regardless of the risk.
There have been similar incidents in other parts of Africa.
More than 30 Kenyans died in July as they collected petrol from
an overturned tanker lorry. In Cameroon, about 120 died as they
gathered fuel at the scene of a railway accident.
Nigeria's oil-producing region has in recent years been the
center of political conflict. Earlier this month protesters from
the Ijaw tribe took over several oil pumping stations, stopping
the flow of about a third of Nigeria's oil exports. Their demand
was for more of the country's oil wealth to flow back to their
communities.
Since the early 1990s there have been repeated mass protests
against the oil companies and the government. The central target
has been Shell Oil, which operates the largest exploration and
production enterprise in a joint venture with the state-owned
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). Since the 1960s
Shell has made $30 billion in oil revenues there, while 7 million
inhabitants of the delta, mostly fishermen and subsistence farmers,
have been devastated by environmental damage and exploitation.
Gas flares from oil wells, burning 24 hours a day, cover nearby
villages with thick soot and produce acid rain. Each year there
are an average of 700 oil spills, ruining water supplies, farmland
and fisheries. The companies have also opposed proposals to bury
their pipelines, because it is far cheaper to lay them over-ground,
even if they are located in close proximity to villages and agricultural
lands. While the companies blame "sabotage" for oil
leaks, most are caused by corrosion, equipment failure, pipe ruptures
and blowouts on the outmoded and poorly maintained equipment.
Protests by hundreds of thousands of Ogoni people, an ethnic
minority which inhabits the region, led to the suspension of Shell
production in 1993. The major oil companies, complaining of the
loss of hundreds of millions of dollars, urged the government
to intervene. Human rights activists say that Shell Oil colluded
with the government in the state repression that followed.
General Abacha dispatched soldiers who murdered scores of Ogoni
villagers in an effort to crush the protest movement. The Lagos
government sought to foment ethnic conflicts, particularly between
the Ogoni and Andoni peoples. Abacha also arrested and framed
up Nigerian author Ken Saro-Wiwa, the leader of the protest movement.
Ignoring international protests, Abacha had Ken Sari-Wiwa executed
in November 1995 along with eight codefendants.
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