The Niger Delta Crisis
Cultural Solidarity vs.
Corporate Interests
By Jessica Long
"In the Western world, they say that ignorance is
bliss. But in Africa we say ignorance kills." ~
Orikinla Osinachi ~
08/26/07 "ich" -- -- Royal Dutch Shell first tapped
its commercial oil well in the Niger Delta in
1956. A half century down the road.... the horrors
of Western corporate interests are still taking
their toll. On August 13, 2007, senior oil workers
threatened to vacate the Delta region if the
violence persisted. As a result, militants have
flooded the streets of Port Harcourt, frisking
"suspicious" individuals. All too predictably,
President Bush has dispatched armed attack boats to
aid President Obasanjo in his aggressive in his
aggressive police-state tactics. It is such
bi-lateral corporate endeavors that have led the
rebels of the Niger Delta region to drastic and
desperate measures.
Globally, they have been given the title as "the bad
guys"- (a literal term used in an article at
allafrica.com ). But, as is often the case, their
exhaustive attempts at reformation have been
overlooked.... merely their actions, not their
motives, are cause for media discussion.
Nevertheless, the crisis in the Niger Delta is
exemplary of how environmental and economic
degradation has led to a violent response infused
with cultural solidarity. Nigeria's history is one
of long running environmental, economic and cultural
exploitation.
Resources are essential to the Nigerian economy; oil
accounting for 90% of exports and 80% of government
revenue. Nigeria, today, earns about $7.09 billion
annually from crude oil. Success in the oil industry
has earned Nigeria the title of the 11th nation to
join OPEC in 1971. But according to UNDP, although
Nigeria is one of the world¡¯s leading oil
producers, it ranks 151st out of 177 of the world¡¯s
poorest countries.
Nationally, 50 to 80 million people are living below
the poverty line. In the Niger Delta, the foci of
oil production, 72% of households live below the
poverty line. A nation with such abounding resources
should not be facing an economic crisis that has
persisted since its liberation in 1960. The Nigerian
federal government, in cohorts with oil
multinationals, works collaboratively to maintain
such bourgeois ideals. Meanwhile, Niger Deltans
continue to economically vegetate in an evolving
global corporate market. Perhaps these conditions
begin to make more sense when we acknowledge that
10% of the country controls 40.8% of the country¡¯s
wealth. Indeed, the ruling hands of the elite are to
blame. While some insist that oil money can be used
to facilitate the launching of future development
plans, the progression towards development remains
stagnant. As we have seen so many times before,
there is a conflict in the capitalist agenda and
humanitarian efforts.
The people of the Niger Delta have attempted
reformative tactics in vain by protesting peacefully
for decades. Aside from minor uprisings in the
1990s, any violence inflicted generally stemmed from
the Nigerian government who acted to maintain their
corporate ties to the global market economy. Yet the
Niger Deltans continued to try reformative ideas to
alleviate the situation: demanding compensation via
institutional/financial agreements for oil producing
communities and implementing laws regarding more
efficient means of resource control.
However, just compensation and resource efficiency
are far from being realized. Thus, economic,
cultural and environmental degradation persist
despite countless decades of peaceful protest and
reform attempts. But now, chaos has erupted. The
frustrations emanating from the lack of attention
given to environmental degradation and perpetual
exploitation by the oil industry has led to a
hardened resentment of the corporate world. The
Human Rights Violations Investigation Committee
states: Oil, one of the greatest blessings God has
showered on our country, has turned out to be a
curse. Oil became, in the hands of the ruling elite
and the political class, an instrument sounding the
death-knell of good governance (Civil Society Forum
2005)
While the world continues to turn a blind eye to the
ethical issues at hand in the Niger Delta, the acts
of violence and vandalism steadily increase. Futile
attempts at reform have given way to violent
disruptions, costing corporate oil companies
millions in damages. The dialogue surrounding this
issue grows steadily as civilians are proving to be
militant, blowing up oil refineries and kidnapping
its workers as in the 2006 MEND Hostage situation.
Who is to blame? And how do we end this chaos?
Certain scholars, like Anthony Maduagwu, target
Nigerian infrastructure and federal government as
the source of instability: ¡°NEPA and oil refineries
are two of the fingered authorities that are being
manipulated. It is the job of the government to fish
out these elements of anti-progress and deal with
them accordingly.¡± Yet when oil production profits
are in the hands of the political elite, the target
of concern becomes not only civic, but corporate as
well. There is a substantial reason why these acts
of violence and vandalism are not solely directed at
the federal government. These acts of violence,
although targeted at the oil industry and Nigerian
federal government, are intended to be heard around
the world. To quote John F. Kennedy, ¡°those who
make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent
revolution inevitable.¡±
At first glance, it would appear that the largest
obstacle facing the indigenous protestors of the
region is cultural fragmentation. With over 250
different cultures residing in Nigeria, the
region¡¯s history is one of long and complex
cultural conflicts. Yet in the face of opposition,
cultural solidarity is crucial for transformation.
Despite years of conflict, various ethnic groups in
the Niger Delta region are allied in their
resistance to the federal government and oil
companies.
The Chikoko Movement, consisting of Ijaw, Itsekiri,
Ogoni, Andoni, and Ilage, and the Odua¡¯s People¡¯s
Congress, is exemplary of cultural unification
within the region. In February 2006, a series of oil
workers have been taken hostage by armed militant
leaders who identify themselves as members of the
Ijaw tribe. The group is responsible for a series of
strikes in which 14 people were murdered and 11
proved missing. While the Ijaw are allied with other
indigenous tribes, they are highly autonomous in
action given the extremity of their situation. More
so than other tribes, the Ijaw remain restricted
from everyday Nigerian politics and civil society.
As a result of the oil refineries, Ijaw public
health has deteriorated and environmental conditions
continue to worsen.
Thus, violence persists. As tension mounts,
miniscule cultural conflicts begin to subside and
give way to communal rebellion. It is far more
practical to oppose as a united front than a
fragmented network of individuals. Slowly,
collective revolutionary tactics are taking a toll
on the corporate market. Continued unrest in the
region has led to a decline of daily oil exports of
2.5 million barrels by 10%. Many Nigerians have
realized that cultural unity provides a platform for
effective opposition. The difficulty remains in
dissuading the "upper-class" Nigerians from the
beckoning finger of the Western 'corpotocracy.'
Jessica Long graduated Western Washington
University with a degree in Political Science. When
she's not travelling the world, she makes her home
in Washington State.
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