Nigeria oil 'total war' warning

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Nigeria oil 'total war' warning

A Nigerian militant commander in the oil-rich southern Niger Delta has told the BBC his group is declaring "total war" on all foreign oil interests.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta has given oil companies and their employees until midnight on Friday night to leave the region.

It recently blew up two oil pipelines, held four foreign oil workers hostage and sabotaged two major oilfields.

The group wants greater control of the oil wealth produced on their land.

The warning came as militants and the army exchanged fire after a government helicopter gunship attacked barges allegedly used by smugglers to transport stolen crude oil.

Correspondents say the militants provide security for the smugglers.

Nigeria is Africa's leading oil exporter and the fifth-biggest source of US oil imports, but despite its oil wealth, many Nigerians live in abject poverty.

Aims

It is the first time the military leader of the Mend movement, Major-General Godswill Tamuno, has spoken publicly of his group's aims.

He refused to be interviewed on tape or for his location to be disclosed.

He told the BBC's Abdullahi Kaura Abubakar that they had launched their campaign, called "dark February", to ensure that all foreign oil interests left.

He said that they had had enough of the exploitation of their resources and wanted to take total control of the area to get their fair share of the wealth.

Our correspondent says the movement brings together a variety of local Ijaw groups that had been operating in the Niger Delta before.

The group enjoys considerable local support and it is difficult to pinpoint exactly who is a member, he says.

Mend's leaders tend to like to be faceless, our reporter says, and they usually send statements to the media via email.

Shell, one of the oil companies operating in the Niger Delta, told our reporter that security measures were being taken to secure their staff and property, but would not give details.

Well armed

The Niger delta has been the scene of a low-level war in recent months and the government has increased its military presence in the region.

After a government raid on oil barges earlier this week, Mend released a statement saying the helicopter gunship had fired rockets and machine-guns at targets on land and accused the military of targeting civilians.

It warned that its fighters were capable of shooting down military helicopters and accused Shell of helping out the security forces by allowing them use of an airstrip it operates.

The military has denied it used the facility.

According to AFP news agency, Shell has not confirmed or denied that its airstrip was the base for the attack.

The smugglers are believed to exchange oil for weapons from eastern Europe.
 

Splicer205

Deceased
Heh. Wonder if this has anything to do with the Marine helicoptor crash. Looks to be in the same region.

Two US Marine helicopters crash off African coast

Two US Marine Corps helicopters have crashed in Africa off the coast of Djibouti and two crew members have been found alive but 10 are still missing, a Pentagon spokeswoman said Friday.

There was no reason to believe hostile fire was involved in the crash, CNN said, quoting US officials.

"There is an investigation under way," said Tech Sergeant, Cindy Dorfner, a US Air Force spokeswoman in the Horn of Africa office.............................
http://www.thanhniennews.com/worlds/?catid=9&newsid=12790
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
splicerswife said:
Heh. Wonder if this has anything to do with the Marine helicoptor crash. Looks to be in the same region.

Two US Marine helicopters crash off African coast

Two US Marine Corps helicopters have crashed in Africa off the coast of Djibouti and two crew members have been found alive but 10 are still missing, a Pentagon spokeswoman said Friday.

There was no reason to believe hostile fire was involved in the crash, CNN said, quoting US officials.

"There is an investigation under way," said Tech Sergeant, Cindy Dorfner, a US Air Force spokeswoman in the Horn of Africa office.............................
http://www.thanhniennews.com/worlds/?catid=9&newsid=12790

Opposite side of the continent.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060218/D8FRFL2O5.html

9 Foreign Oil Workers Kidnapped in Nigeria


Email this Story

Feb 18, 5:44 AM (ET)

By OSMOND CHIDI

(AP) An unidentified boy fishes near an oil well belonging to Shell Petroleum Development Company in...
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WARRI, Nigeria (AP) - Armed militants raided a boat belonging to the U.S. oil service firm Wilbros and seized nine foreign oil workers Saturday in Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta, a company official said.

More than 40 militants overpowered military guards on the boat near the oil port city of Warri, said the company official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. He said Wilbros was working on a contract with Royal Dutch Shell.

Maj. Said Hammed, spokesman for a military task force charged with security in the Niger Delta, confirmed there was an attack on an oil company but gave no details.

On Friday, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported that militant commander Godswill Tamuno had announced his Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta was declaring "total war" on foreign oil interests and warned them to leave the oil-rich southern delta by midnight.

The same group has issued similar threats for more than a month and claimed responsibility for attacking two pipelines and abducting for foreign oil workers who were later released.

The group says it is fighting for greater local control of oil wealth in the impoverished region.
 

Jmurman

Veteran Member
When you first read these reports you have to side with the rebels...then you see that every time a rebel group takes over, which in Africa is a common occurance, they usually end up being worse than the group they are trying to over throw.

Africa is a nasty place...especially for the Africans.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Jmurman said:
When you first read these reports you have to side with the rebels...then you see that every time a rebel group takes over, which in Africa is a common occurance, they usually end up being worse than the group they are trying to over throw.

Africa is a nasty place...especially for the Africans.

And especially for the Christians. Nothing good is going to come of this civil war.

And I can foresee our enemies exploiting this, causing bigger problems than Katrina did.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Well folks, more bad news from Nigeria....

Cartoon Protests Leave 15 Dead in Nigeria



By NJADVARA MUSA, Associated Press Writer 52 minutes ago

Nigerian Muslims protesting caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad attacked Christians and burned churches on Saturday, killing at least 15 people in the deadliest confrontation yet in the whirlwind of Muslim anger over the drawings.

It was the first major protest to erupt over the issue in Africa's most populous nation. An Associated Press reporter saw mobs of Muslim protesters swarm through the city center with machetes, sticks and iron rods. One group threw a tire around a man, poured gas on him and set him ablaze.

In Libya, the parliament suspended the interior minister after at least 11 people died when his security forces attacked rioters who torched the Italian consulate in Benghazi.

Right-wing Italian Reforms Minister Roberto Calderoli resigned under pressure, accused of fueling the fury in Benghazi by wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with one of the offending cartoons, first published nearly five months ago in a Danish newspaper.

Danish church officials met with a top Muslim cleric in Cairo, meanwhile, but made no significant headway in defusing the conflict.

And in what has become a daily event, tens of thousands of Muslims protested — this time in Britain, Pakistan and Austria — to denounce the perceived insult.

But it was in Nigeria, where mutual suspicions between Christians and Muslims have led to thousands of deaths in recent years, that tensions boiled over into sectarian violence.

Thousands of rioters burned 15 churches in Maiduguri in a three-hour rampage before troops and police reinforcements restored order, Nigerian police spokesman Haz Iwendi said. Iwendi said security forces arrested dozens of people in the city about 1,000 miles northeast of the capital, Lagos.

Chima Ezeoke, a Christian Maiduguri resident, said protesters attacked and looted shops owned by minority Christians, most of them with origins in the country's south.

"Most of the dead were Christians beaten to death on the streets by the rioters," Ezeoke said. Witnesses said three children and a priest were among those killed.

Nigeria, with a population of more than 130 million, is roughly divided between a predominantly Muslim north and a mainly Christian south.

Thousands of people have died in this West African country since 2000 in religious violence fueled by the adoption of the strict Islamic legal code by a dozen states in the north, seen by most Christians as a move to impose religious hegemony on non-Muslims.

The Danish cartoons, including one showing Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban with an ignited fuse, have set off sometimes violent protests around the world.

After the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten printed the caricatures in September, other Western newspapers, mostly in Europe, followed suit, asserting their news value and the right to freedom of expression.

But Nigeria has been spared much of the violence seen elsewhere in the world, though lawmakers in the heavily Muslim state of Kano burned Danish and Norwegian flags and barred Danish companies from bidding on a major construction project. Kano lawmakers also called on the state's 5 million people to boycott Danish goods.

With Saturday's deaths, at least 45 people have been killed in protests across the Muslim world, according to a count by The Associated Press.

In the violence in Libya, Seif el-Islam Gadhafi, the son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, said four of the 11 dead were believed to have been Egyptians or Palestinians.

"Setting the consulate on fire was a mistake, but using excessive force was the most tragic response," the younger Gadhafi said, explaining the suspension of Interior Minister Nasr al-Mabrouk.

Gadhafi expressed pride, however, that the demonstrators were behind Calderoli's resignation when "other Arab states refused or lagged behind in taking revenge for insults to their religion."

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi blamed the riots in Libya, Italy's former colony, on "thoughtless action by our minister," the Italian news agency ANSA quoted him as saying.

Calderoli said he wore the shirt to show "solidarity to all those who were hit by the blind violence of religious fanaticism." He said he did not intend "to offend the Muslim religion nor to be the pretext for yesterday's violence."

In Cairo, Bishop Karsten Nissen, of Denmark's Evangelical Lutheran Church, met with Grand Imam Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi of al-Azhar University, the world's highest Sunni Muslim seat of learning.

Tantawi said the Danish prime minister must apologize for the drawings and further demanded that the world's religious leaders, including him and Pope Benedict XVI, should meet to write a law that "condemns insulting any religion, including the Holy Scriptures and the prophets." He said the United Nations should then impose the law on all countries.

In response, Nissen did not address the issue of a global law but said it was impossible for Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen to apologize for what a newspaper had published.

"I have brought to his excellency (Tantawi) the apology of the newspaper, but our prime minister did not draw these cartoons. Our prime minister is not the editor of this newspaper. He cannot apologize for something he did not do," Nissen said.

So far the West and Islamic nations remain at loggerheads over fundamental, but conflicting cultural imperatives — the Western democratic assertion of a right to free speech and press freedom, versus the Islamic dictum against any representation of the Prophet Muhammad. Muslims say such depictions could encourage idolatry.
 

bobby.knight

Senior Member
I know this will bring havoc, but I sympathize with the rebels, they have been taken advantage of like so many other people in so many countries where their wealth in natural resources has been stripped from them by the greed of the buyers and their own people. The money never trickled down to the average guy with a family, just like all of us here.

Review the post on the miners in Kentucky, who will be replaced with illegals from Mexico for half price. Is that fair?

It is if your stock return doubles, but not fair if you lose you job to an illegal and you are trying to raise a family.

I guess it depend on what side of the fence your on, doesn't it.

Bobby.Knight NBC
 

Stormy

Inactive
So these "militants" are blowing up pipelines, sabotaging oil fields and trying to run out all the foreign oil company personnel so they can have all the wealth from the region's oil.

And how do they intend to get the pipelines, terminals and other oil producing infrastructure up and running by themselves with no replacement parts or knowledge of petroleum production and engineering?

Africa is one place I'll never understand :screw:
 
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