Enjoying a chilled cider in a hotel pool bar, former Nigerian
militant leader Ebi John has a simple message for President Muhammadu Buhari -
keep paying my men or risk a new insurgency in the Niger Delta.
Tensions have been building in the southern swampland since
Buhari said in his inauguration speech in May that he wanted to
"streamline" an amnesty, that included stipend payments, agreed in
2009 with militants who were fighting for a greater share of oil revenues and
hampering output in Africa's biggest producer.
Buhari's spokesman Femi Adesina told Reuters the president
wanted to continue the amnesty "as long as necessary" though it was
not a long-term answer to the region's problems.
But as details remain unclear, uncertainty has fuelled
speculation that when the amnesty's original term ends in December, Buhari
could halt or cut the benefits given to 30,000 youths and former militants
aimed at discouraging them from blowing up pipelines or kidnapping oil workers.
Buhari's comments also reinforced suspicions in some quarters
that his home region, the mainly Muslim north, wants to exploit the Christian
and relatively neglected south that generates 70 percent of state income.
"My people are suffering. We drink from the river where
we also wash and defecate," Ebi said, sitting in a bar next to a swimming
pool in Yenagoa, capital of Bayelsa state, home to major oil fields.
"If the government does not meet our demands we will
take control of our resources. We will manage our own oil," Ebi said,
prompting nods from other ex-militant leaders who, like him, call themselves
"general".
The amnesty for the Christian militants, who wanted a greater
share of oil revenues and to end what they call the region's historic
marginalisation, was implemented by Buhari's predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan, a
Delta Christian.
The Delta's town and cities have been quiet but in the
mangrove swamps where most oil wells are located, kidnappings and armed
robberies have recently gone up, according to Delta residents.
Gunmen attacked a Shell oilfield on Friday and it had to shut
a major pipeline in August to stop oil theft.
"Sea piracy and armed robberies are on the rise,"
said environmental activist Alagoa Morris. "I am an indigenous person but
I am afraid to go to the creeks. They rape, kill and maim."
Under the amnesty, worth an estimated $300 million annually,
thousands of men have received job training but those who have finished courses
have struggled to land jobs in an oil industry that mainly hires highly skilled
workers.
Instead, the main benefits have been lucrative contracts to
secure pipelines, and a monthly 65,000 naira ($330) cash handout that has
allowed them to leave the mosquito-infested creeks and settle in cities such as
Yenagoa or Port Harcourt.
Many have started families, and fear losing their main source
of income.
"I have three kids. I pay 35,000 naira for each of them
for the kindergarten per term," said Samuel Epitari, another general
sitting at a table packed with beer bottles.
In the heyday of the "oil business", Epitari added,
he made 500,000 naira a month, and would not hesitate to take up arms again if
Buhari turns off the money taps.
"We will go back to our struggle," he said, adding
that some groups had started recruiting again.
CORRUPTION
In the March election, Delta voters backed Jonathan, their
local "son", and largely kept their cool when he conceded.
But handouts to the youths and former militants have not been
paid for three months, according to "Ex-General Pastor" Reuben Wilson
who warned in a statement of "catastrophic consequences" should the
amnesty end.
The region gets an extra 13 percent from state revenues but
corruption has stunted development in the Delta relative to the rest of
Nigeria.
A new airport and new hospital never materialised in Yenagoa,
where street vendors sell fried snails next to garbage piles. Life in the
creeks, where basic services are almost non-existent, are even tougher.
In Yenaka, just a few miles outside Yenagoa by boat - there
is no tarmac road or bridge - villagers and crew have to raise their hands as
they pass a maritime checkpoint because police are so wary of getting ambushed.
On the jetty, women wash their hair in the river as there is
no running water while young men doze on plastic chairs, trying to escape the
heat inside their single-storey buildings.
Yenaka is home to the family of Diezani Alison-Madueke,
Jonathan's oil minister who is now being investigated by anti-corruption police
in Britain.
She has denied any wrongdoing but villagers see her as
typifying an elite that has failed to drag Africa's most populous nation out of
poverty.
"Right from the time she was elected she has not done
anything for our community," said Oguta Douglas, the deputy community
leader, sitting on a traditional throne in his modest house. "There is
nothing here, you can see for yourself. No water, no light, no road."
The oil firms have tried to win over villages by bringing
roads and water but community leaders say the projects are too little and
poorly conceived - for instance setting up diesel generators that residents
cannot afford to run.
"The oil companies are only interested in scooping out
the oil and leave the impact to us," said Obunagha community elder Tari
Dadiowei. "If the amnesty ends I don't know what will happen."
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