Niger Delta: Restoring The Rights Of Citizens
By
Ike Okonta
source: http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/38222
November 9, 2006
A massive democratic deficit is at the heart of the Niger Delta crisis, concludes Ike Okota in the third and final article in a series on the troubled Nigerian region. The previous two articles can be found at http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/38005 (http://www.dawodu.com/okonta4.htm )
and
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/38119 (
http://www.dawodu.com/okonta2.htm )
It is not yet clear whether the massacre at Letugbene on 20th August
will turn out to be a crippling blow, compelling MEND militants to beat
a retreat and explore peace alternatives with greater vigour. One fact
is clear, though. Both the central government and the oil companies have
retreated from their ‘peace and dialogue’ stance of last April when
overtures were made to Ijaw youth and community leaders to come to Abuja
and agree on a new ‘Marshall Plan’ for the Niger Delta. The new policy,
although not favoured by some of President Obasanjo’s senior commanders,
is containment and subsequent evisceration of the youth militias through
superior fire-power.
Shell led the ‘return to the warpath’ initiative when its officials
secretly approached the US military in early March to see if it could
intervene in the delta. Faced with MEND’s increasingly focused attacks
on its facilities, the company had shut down 455,000 barrels of daily
crude output, evacuated the bulk of its staff, and declared force
majaure. Company executives adopted two policies at the same time in
this period, both designed to serve the same end of ensuring that Shell
remained the top player in the delta. When Admiral Henry Ulrich,
commander of the US Naval forces in Europe visited Nigeria last March, a
delegation of oil company officials led by Shell asked him to deploy his
ships to the region to ‘protect our investments.’ [1] At the same time
company officials were briefing local journalists in Lagos and Abuja
that they favoured dialogue with Ijaw youth as the only route to lasting
peace in the restive region, a manoeuvre clearly designed to buy time
while they readied their military option.
Admiral Ulrich turned down the request, explaining that ‘it was
difficult to conceive of a way that foreign forces could intervene
because attacks on oil facilities and vessels were occurring very close
to shore in territorial waters, or from the shore itself.’ [2] While
maritime analysts at the US Office of Naval Intelligence in Fort
Lauderdale openly acknowledge that the Nigerian government is no longer
able to ensure security in the delta region, and that indeed oil
production in the country will ‘hang precariously in the balance for
some time,’ they have been careful to avoid giving the impression that
increased US military presence in the Gulf of Guinea is a prelude to
‘Vietnamisation’ of West Africa’s oil-rich belt.
Ulrich, on the occasion of a courtesy visit to Nigeria’s chief of naval
staff in Abuja on March 19 informed journalists that his government
planned to increase its naval presence in the Gulf of Guinea for the
sole purpose of ensuring maritime safety in the region. He explained
that his primary concern was the proliferation of ‘terrorist activities’
in the region, and that he had deployed two ships with training and
repair facilities to the Gulf of Guinea to assist West African navies in
policing their shores more effectively.
The Gulf of Guinea, comprising fifteen west and central African
countries, is critical to the United States’ oil security. The region
accounted for half of the nine million barrels per day produced by
Africa in 2004. In the same year, the continent supplied an estimated 18
per cent of US net oil imports, with Angola and Nigeria as the leading
suppliers. This development has meant an increase in the number of ships
and oil tankers that pass through the west coast of Africa on their way
to America’s east coast. Said Ulrich, ‘In this day and age, all nations
have a vested interest in knowing the ships that are coming into their
waters, their territory and what they are carrying.’ [3]
Right-wing American journalists and think-tanks , with the
Washington–based Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
in the lead, have also been playing up the ‘surge in Islamic terrorist
threat in the Gulf of Guinea’ angle, arguing that with billions of
dollars of US investment now in the region, thousands of US workers in
the oil fields, and strategic supplies of energy at stake, US effort to
boost the capability of these countries to repel attacks from Islamic
terrorists of the bin Laden variety had become imperative.
Local journalists and environmental activists in Nigeria and other Gulf
of Guinea countries have questioned the assertion that the region is
crawling with Islamic terrorists, pointing out that neither the Bush
government nor the right-wing think-tanks it is allied with have been
able to produce compelling evidence to back up their claims when asked
to do so. They have also expressed fears that the new ring of steel
being put in place in their region by the US navy is an underhand
attempt to militarise the region and encourage attacks on oil facilities
by armed militias and then use this as justification for military
occupation of the Gulf of Guinea.
Significantly, reference to ‘another Vietnam’ and ‘the new Iraq’ is now
routine in the Niger delta creeks, and such talk is not restricted to
armed militias like MEND. When rumours began to make the rounds in
February, at the outset of MEND’s offensive that the US government had
resolved to send in the Marines to assist Nigerian troops in rescuing
the nine expatriate workers they had kidnapped, there was a general
uproar. Patrick Bigha, leader of the Warri Ijaw Peace Monitoring Group,
a civic pressure group that espouses non-violent political action,
quickly called a press conference in the city and declared that ‘The
Niger Delta is not Afghanistan or Iraq and any attempt to dare us will
end in a bloodbath and the greatest defeat in the history of the
American Army.’ [4]
Such utterances is sweet music to American journalists like Jeffrey
Taylor of the Atlantic Monthly, who, after travelling in the Niger Delta
for a couple of days last March, wrote an article in the magazine making
the controversial claim that Nigeria had become the largest failed state
on earth, further threatened by takeover from radical Islamic forces.
This, Taylor, argued, would endanger the region’s abundant oil reserves
that the US government had vowed it would protect, adding that ‘should
that day come, it would herald a military intervention far more massive
than the Iraqi campaign.’ [5] The vultures of war have scented the Gulf
of Guinea oil prize, and are now circling overhead, egging on combatants
on both sides, and readying their bellies for the inevitable feast of
corpses at the end of battle.
The fear of triggering another Vietnam-like scenario is, however,
furthest from the calculations of the Nigerian and US governments at
present. US deployment of military hardware in the region continues
apace. The US European Command has concluded plans to construct a naval
base in Sao Tome and Principe, to complement the permanent military base
in Djibouti, in the strategic Horn of Africa. On 28 August Nigerian and
American officials in Abuja announced a new Nigeria-United States Gulf
of Guinea Energy Security Initiative aimed at ‘securing’ $600 billion of
new investments in oil fields in the region.
Present estimates indicate that the gulf hosts some 14 billion barrels
of crude in deep offshore fields. There are 33 fixed crude oil
production platforms, 20 floating production facilities, and 13 floater
and off-take vessels in the Gulf. This is expected to increase to 159
fixed platforms and 700 oil wells by 2008. Any military attack and
subsequent disruption of production would not only threaten US and
Western Europe’s energy supplies, the loss of billions of dollars in
investments could throw their economies into a tail-spin. The energy
security initiative is the American response to this potential threat.
But is building a new infrastructure of state violence in the Gulf of
Guinea an intelligent and effective answer to the fundamentally
political questions that fifty years of uncontrolled oil exploitation,
massive corruption, and cynical exploitation of the local communities
have raised, now given militant expression by the MEND militia?
Brining the civic back in
This author has been travelling in the Niger Delta’s devastated
communities extensively since the late 1980s, but nothing prepared him
for what he encountered in Oporoza and its satellite hamlets in the
Western delta last August. Poverty and neglect are the norm in the
region, but in Oporoza, and further still in the clutch of creek hamlets
that constitute the Ijaw clan of Egbema, they rise up in the shape of
flimsy huts on decayed wooden stilts, bracken greenish water ponds from
which the bedraggled inhabitants drink, and polluted fishing creeks long
denuded of life, to smack you rudely in the face. To visit Oporoza and
Egbema is to encounter the very nadir of the noxious embrace of Big Oil,
unaccountable government, and the excruciating indigence that only
violent exclusion from the civic sphere can bring about.
For as Amartya Sen has so brilliantly demonstrated in his book
Development as Freedom, poverty and famine only flourish where people
are deprived of the right to participate in the political and civic
process to determine the way in which they desire to be governed. This
is only too true of Oporoza and the wider Niger Delta where the machine
guns of the Nigerian military, oiled by oil company executives, have
violently elbowed ordinary people out of the public sphere.
Academics, journalists, and development workers that espouse the
so-called ‘Resource Curse’ theory argue that resource-rich countries
like Nigeria inevitably degenerate into authoritarian and corrupt rule
because it is easy for the military elites and their civilian allies to
hijack the oil fields by force and redesign political institutions to
sustain the new regime of praetorian government. [6] The junta,
plentifully supplied with dollars from oil sales, does not bother to tax
citizens to finance governance, thereby reducing them to powerless
spectators unable to drive economic development or participate
effectively in the political arena. Poverty, corruption in high places,
and religious and ethnic violence are usually the result, the advocates
of the resource curse theory argue.
But there is nothing inevitable about resource-rich regions regressing
into poverty and remaining in the ditch of privation, as the cases of
oil-rich Norway and Canada today illustrate. Nor is it the case that all
movements toward authoritarianism are driven by the lure of easy spoils.
Nigerian politics was already well on the way to centralized and
unaccountable government, driven by the leaders of the Northern Region,
before oil production commenced in 1956. This was largely the legacy of
colonial conquest, and the undemocratic institutions of governance put
in place by the British to exploit the wealth of the country undisturbed
by the local people, subsequently handed over to carefully chosen
political leaders who would go on to protect their interests after the
colonial rulers quit in 1960. The Maxim machine gun, not the ballot box,
was the instrument of rule in the Niger Delta and Nigeria in the age of
colonialism.
It matters when oil was discovered in a country – before or after its
institutions of government and political representation have firmed up
and able to serve as a countervailing force to would-be despots and
carpet-baggers. Norway is prosperous because her institutions of
accountability were well-established and self-propelling long before she
struck oil. Nigeria is a basket case today because her people were still
under unaccountable colonial rule when oil was discovered in the Niger
Delta in 1956. The machine guns that slaughtered the innocents of
Letugbene last August are directly descended from the Maxim guns that
Frederick Lugard employed to ‘pacify’ the ‘natives’ at the behest of the
Royal Niger Company at the turn of the twentieth century. Shell and
crude oil may have replaced Taubman Goldie and his thirst for palm oil,
but the marriage of egregious violence and the resources of local people
remain undisturbed, a potent link which in the specific case of oil, is
illuminated by Prof. Michael Watt’s ‘petroviolence’ thesis. [7]
It is telling that top on the list of the grievances that the MEND
militia pointed to in its negotiations with government officials last
March was the exclusion of the Ijaw from meaningful political
participation in the Nigerian project following the return of electoral
politics in 1999. Anxious to arrange a ceasefire so oil production could
resume, a delegation comprising two Shell executives and Timi Alaibe,
finance director of the government-controlled Niger Delta Development
Commission, visited MEND’s ‘Council of Elders’ in Camp Five, a fortified
island near Oporoza where they were ensconced in early June. The MEND
spokesperson argued that discussions must go beyond ‘mere provision of
electricity and water’ and focus on the political marginalisation of the
Ijaw because, according to him, ‘we believe that we have to seek first
our political freedom and every other thing will follow.’ [8]
Oboko Bello had earlier framed these grievances in the handbook
Constitutionality of the Ijaw Struggle thus: ‘The Ijaw of Warri,
hitherto denied liberty, political space, and peace have been
continuously robbed of equal participation in democracy and good
governance of the Federation at the local, state and central
governments…These entities corruptly control oil and gas resources which
exploration has had devastating impact on the Ijaw people and their
environment.’ [9] Significantly, Oronto Douglas, the Ijaw lawyer and
environmental campaigner, put these political issues in the forefront of
the list of demands he and other Ijaw leaders presented to their fellow
delegates when they participated in the constitutional dialogue
President Obasanjo convened in Abuja in 2005.
We have it on the authority of the Atlanta-based Carter Centre that
local and presidential elections were massively rigged in the states
comprising the Niger Delta in 1999, following the return of the armed
forces to the barracks. Former President Jimmy Carter and his wife
Rosalyn travelled to the region to monitor the elections and reported:
‘Serious problems were observed in the National Assembly elections of
February 20, partially caused by low voter turn out and the unknown
status of many candidates who had been nominated by the political
parties. Some ballot boxes were stuffed, election officials bribed, and
the final results incorrectly tabulated. In addition to our normal
reports, I wrote personal letters to the presidential candidates asking
them to urge their supporters to refrain from improprieties during the
presidential election.’ [10]
Carter’s well-meaning entreaty was ignored, and the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) proceeded to rig the presidential election in March 1999 and
install Olusegun Obasanjo president. The PDP also rigged the vote four
years later, and returned Obasanjo and all the PDP governors to office.
In Bayelsa State in particular, Shell and ENI executives provided cash
and logistics to ensure that the local and governorship elections went
the way of their favoured candidates in 2003. In the Niger Delta,
several influential politicians and community leaders who spoke out
against this massive disenfranchisement of the local people were
set-upon by government-sponsored thugs and murdered.
Prominent members of such civic groups as the Ijaw Youth Council were
lured with promises of cash and government contracts and made to work
for the governors of the various Niger Delta states as enforcers and
thugs. Indeed, the metamorphosis of political activism in the delta
region from non-violent advocacy to armed insurrection is partly
explained by the deliberate infiltration of their ranks by government
and oil company agents, thereby narrowing the civic options of those who
refused to be co-opted. In desperation, elements of the latter group
embraced the AK47 to seek redress.
The venality and corruption displayed by the governors of the delta
states following the return of electoral politics in 1999 is driven by
the fact that they rigged themselves into office with the support of
powerful patrons in Abuja, and now loot local treasuries at the behest
of the latter. Such government development initiatives as OMPADEC
(1993), NDDC (1999) and the newly-established Council on Socio-economic
Development of Coastal States in the Niger Delta (COSEDECS) (April
2006), ostensibly designed to address long-standing poverty and social
neglect in the region, have also been transformed into avenues to
dispense perks and favours to the friends and relatives of the PDP
leadership in the capital.
Authoritarian in conception and execution, these projects, including the
bewildering array of ‘community development projects’ run by the oil
companies, although well-meaning, have not been able to embed in a
politically marginalised people. Nor have they been able to deliver
jobs, social amenities and peace – the so-called ‘dividends of
democracy’ that President Obasanjo promised the people of the region
when he took office in May 1999. Anna Zalik, the Canadian scholar and
rights activist, has drawn our attention to the problematic of
development strategies devoid of democratic and participatory structures
in oil-bearing communities in the region. [11]
Those who sneer at youth activists in the Niger Delta today and claim
that the return of politics has only transformed them into younger
versions of the corrupt military leaders they battled against in the
1990s fail to distinguish between fraudulent elections, which put the
present crop of political ‘leaders’ in the region in power in 1999, and
proper electoral processes that, had they taken place, would have put
the true representatives of the local people in positions of government
and authority. At the heart of the Niger Delta crisis, which has now
ballooned into armed insurgency, is this democracy deficit.
MEND, properly understood, is the violent child of the deliberate and
long-running constriction of the public space in the Niger Delta in
which ordinary citizens, now reduced to penurious subjects, can exercise
their civil and political rights in the legitimate pursuit of material
and social wellbeing. Behind the mask of the MEND militant is a
political subject forced to pick up an AK47 to restore his rights as a
citizen.
The journey to peace and prosperity in the region can only commence when
the civic is brought back in.
* Dr Ike Okonta is a research fellow in contemporary African politics at
the University of Oxford. He is co-author of Where Vultures Feast:
Shell, Human Rights and Oil, Verso, New York, 2003.
* Please send comments to
editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at
www.pambazuka.org
[1] Reuters, ‘Nigerian oil “hangs in balance,” 23 March, 2006.
[2] See Reuters article.
[3] George Oji, ‘US to increase Naval Presence in Gulf of Guinea,’
ThisDay, 20 March, 2006.
[4] Segun James, ‘Militants to US: Steer clear of Niger Delta,’ ThisDay,
Lagos, 24 February, 2006.
[5] Jeffery Taylor, ‘Worse than Iraq?’ Atlantic, April, 2006.
[6] Professor Jeffery Sachs, a Columbia University economist and UN Sec
Gen Kofi Annan’s adviser on Millennium Development Goals, developed the
‘Resource Curse’ theory to explain the seeming inability of
resource-rich states in Africa and Latin America to industrialise and
prosper like their counterparts in south-east Asia.
[7] Michael Watts, Petro-Violence: Some Thoughts on Community,
Extraction and Political Ecology, Berkeley Workshop on Environmental
Politics, Institute of International Studies, University of California,
Berkeley, September 1999
[8] See ‘A Trip to Mend Headquarters,’ The Ijaw Voice, July 2006.
[9] See Constitutionality of the Ijaw Struggle, preface.
[10] Jimmy Carter, ‘Visit to Nigeria,’ The Carter Center, Atlanta, 25
February, 1999.
[11] See Anna Zalik, ‘The Niger Delta: “Petro-violence” and “Partnership
Development”, Review of African Political Economy, 2004.