Niger Delta militants have dared the Nigerian government barely 24 hours after the vice president, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, visited the as part of the federal government’s efforts to restore peace in the area and bolster earnings for the nation.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack which occurred at a crude oil trunkline in Ughelli, Delta State, the Independent newspaper said.
Details were not immediately available.
Osinbajo had on Monday held a meeting with traditional rulers in Delta State with the objective of finding lasting peace in the region.
Urhobo chiefs reportedly staged a walkout on the vice president at the meeting which held at the PTI Conference Centre in Effurun. Below is the video of the incident.
The Muhammadu Buhari-led federal government has struggled with relations with the people of the South South, the home of the Niger Delta, the owners of the oil and gas resources in the country.
President Buhari cast the tone for his relationship with the troubled oil region when a few weeks after his inauguration on May 29, 2015 he said that areas that gave him 5% votes (the South East and the South South), should not expected to be treated the same as areas that gave him 97% of the votes (North East and North West).
He has followed through his policy of marginalisation by attacking leaders – political, business, and traditional – from the Niger Delta. One of his early presidential orders was that the stipends to former Niger Delta militants who were under the Amnesty Programme be stopped.
Traditional rulers from the region have been hounded and harassed, their homes ransacked by agents of the country’s secret police. Soldiers have arrested a traditional ruler in Ogoniland.
The first president of Nigeria from the Niger Delta, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, has been unfairly attacked by the Buhari regime in several forms under the guise of “anti-corruption” war. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has illegally clamped down on the bank accounts of former first lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, and those of leading businessmen and women from the region.
Because of the president’s anti-Niger Delta posture and policies, there has been a renewed restiveness in the region. The leading militant group in the region, the Niger Delta Avengers, successfully cut the oil production in the country from 2.2 million barrels a day to less than 600,000 barrels a day following a chain of attacks on oil installations.