ETS! Vol. 6 No. 12
30 Jan 2002

ONE PLANET

Meanwhile, in Nigeria...

On Wednesday, January 16, a general strike shut down the nation of 
Nigeria. The Western press was busy elsewhere, reporting on the 
billions of dollars Western nations had pledged to rebuild 
Afghanistan, so they missed another event in the gradual 
disintegration of the most populous and resource-rich nation in 
Africa.

The strike, called by the Nigerian Labor Congress, was over 
IMF-mandated fuel price hikes. Fuel in Nigeria is cheap, and fuel 
subsidies are about the only reliable service the Nigerian people 
receive from their government. It's not surprising that they want to 
defend the subsidies, since they provides income for people who would 
otherwise starve. In a nation where the average income is $300 per 
year, many Nigerians survive by buying up fuel and carrying it across 
the border to sell in other countries for a profit.

Nigeria, the world's seventh largest oil exporter, should have the 
wealthiest, most educated population in Africa, but that's not the 
case. It has two enormous problems. It owes $30 billion to the Paris 
Club of creditor nations; its annual debt service is $3.6 
billion--nearly half of its annual budget. In addition, decades of 
military rule have produced an entrenched kleptocracy at all levels 
of government, from the generals at the top of the pyramid down to 
the civil servants in the villages. At least half of Nigeria's 
current debt load represents money stolen by former dictators and 
their cronies.

The Nigerian people have done without things the rest of the world 
takes for granted, even in some of the poorest nations in Africa. A 
population of 123 million people must survive on a limited amount of 
land, which means people migrate to cities in search of 
opportunities. In cities, unemployment is high while education is 
nonexistent, and this has produced a huge underclass of unemployed, 
urban youth.

In the villages, the central government is largely absent. Contracts 
for building roads, supplying electricity and water, and building 
schools and hospitals are awarded by political patronage and 
favoritism; one village may have running water, while its neighbors 
must do without. These economic differences add fuel to ethnic and 
cultural differences, sparking religious and ethnic riots and 
killings.

Nigeria has at least 250 different ethnic and language groups. In the 
absence of government social programs, it's the ethnic and cultural 
groups that provide services to needy people--when they can. Many 
regions are so impoverished that even ethnic ties can provide no 
resources for them; instead, such ties become an excuse to get 
together and raid or burn a neighboring village.

In the Niger Delta, where most of the nation's oil extraction occurs, 
environmental devastation has removed huge swaths of land from 
farming and food production. Five multinational oil companies have 
provided some Delta communities with electricity, hospitals, schools, 
and decent drinking water. But the vast majority of Delta villages 
must do without, and this has led to massive protests and sabotage of 
oil pipelines and infrastructure.

The one service Nigerians can rely on, however, is persecution by the 
military, whose human rights record is appalling. In October, for 
example, military units moved in to quell ethnic violence in the 
central states of Benue and Taraba. When they were through, three 
towns had been completely destroyed and hundreds of unarmed civilians 
lined up and shot. President Olusegan Obasanjo has not pursued the 
perpetrators, but instead excused them, saying that the military had 
acted in self-defense.

Obasanjo himself has become a problematic figure. He was elected in 
May of 1999 in Nigeria's first elections in 16 years. Self-described 
as anti-corruption, Obasanjo has purged some former military 
personnel and higher-level figures from his government and set up 
anti-corruption boards in each government branch. He asked western 
banks to freeze the offshore accounts of former dictator Sani Abacha, 
and he's trying to recover stolen funds. Obasanjo formed a human 
rights panel to investigate military abuses during the previous 
dictatorship period, basing it on South Africa's Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission. He is popular with the West, having 
restored Nigeria's status with the World Bank and IMF, and he 
routinely visits the White House and accepts Western diplomatic 
visitors.

But Obasanjo himself is a former military dictator, having ruled the 
country in the late 1970s, a period of rampant human rights 
violations. He neglected to change a 1966 military decree which has 
prevented the human rights panel from summoning former military 
rulers to testify, so Ibrahim Babangida and Abdulsalam Abubakar will 
go unpunished. In fact, Babangida, whose wealth came directly from 
the Nigerian treasury, is expected to run against Obasanjo in the 
2003 presidential election.

In addition, Obasanjo sponsored an anti-corruption bill that exempted 
himself, his deputy, and the regional state governors from 
investigation. Obasanjo has recently come under criticism for 
siphoning public funds into personal perks, like a new $78 million 
presidential jet, and his frequent trips abroad with a huge personal 
staff has cost the treasury millions. His use of the military to 
govern--for example, dispatching troops to break up the January 16 
general strike by arresting 10 prominent labor leaders--has many 
Nigerians believing that the military dictatorship period is not over.

The Benue debacle in October was the worst government-sponsored 
massacre in Nigeria since the Biafran war in the 1960s. As Obansanjo 
increasing relies on the military to punish Nigeria's impoverished 
population, the people will respond with more violence. Eventually, 
Nigeria may fracture along ethnic and religious lines akin to the 
former Yugoslavia.

As one young, educated Nigerian put it, "We want out of the Federal 
Republic of Nigeria. Why should we be part of a federal government 
that cannot build anything for us, only destroy?"

--Maria Tomchick

Some references for this article: "Protesters paralyse Nigeria with 
strike over fuel price rises," Karen McGregor, The Independent (UK), 
1/17/02; "Union chief held as fuel price rise fires up Nigerians," 
Chris McGreal, Guardian Unlimited (London), 1/16/02; "Generals evade 
Nigeria rights panel," BBC News Online, 11/1/01; "Oil price fall hits 
Nigeria," BBC News Online, 11/7/01; "Nigerian Army Said to Massacre 
Hundreds of Civilians," Norimitsu Onishi, New York Times, 10/30/01; 
"Analysis: Nigeria's spiral of violence," Dan Isaacs, BBC News 
Online, 10/31/01; "Nigeria's war of terror: Women, children being 
mutilated in brutal ethnic conflict," Ivan Watson, San Francisco 
Chronicle, 8/1/01; "Nigerian ministers resign," BBC News Online, 
6/13/01; "Nigeria's Oil Exploitation Leaves Delta Poisoned," Douglas 
Farah, Washington Post, 3/18/01, A22; "Nigeria talks debts with top 
bankers," Elizabeth Hunt, BBC News Online, 2/21/01; "Corruption: 
Obasanjo's toughest challenge," Eniwoke Ibagere, BBC News Online, 
5/28/00.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/business/newsid_1732000/1732196.stm
BBC News | BUSINESS | Nigeria's oil wealth shuns the needy

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_1787000/1787494.stm
BBC News | AFRICA | Nigeria military under fire

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_1791000/1791045.stm
BBC News | AFRICA | Hundreds missing after Lagos blasts

http://www.moles.org/ProjectUnderground/motherlode/shell/shellgame.html
Shell Info | Project Underground

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