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Nigeria: Shell workers ‘blocked’ by protesters

3 April 2012

Hundreds of Nigerian protesters blocked waterways in the Niger Delta to prevent Shell workers from reaching oil rigs.

One protester said they wanted to remind Shell of its responsibilities to the local Nembe Island community, which needs electricity and other amenities.

Later in the afternoon, a local chief ordered the protest to end and the release of some workers on board three Shell boats blocked by the protesters.

The oil giant has denied to the BBC that anyone was kidnapped.

Nigeria is one of the world’s major oil producers, but the oil-producing Niger Delta region remains one of the country’s poorest and least developed regions.

For several years, bombings and kidnappings by militants in the Niger Delta – fighting for more rights and a share of oil wealth for local people – paralysed the oil industry.

Nearly three years ago, most militants accepted a government amnesty, but the BBC’s Abdul Muhammed Isa in Port Harcourt says four soldiers and four policemen were killed by unidentified gunmen in the creeks around Nembe Island last month.

‘Improving lives’

Shell has four flow stations and two oil rigs in Nembe Island – one of the largest communities in the oil-producing zones of Bayelsa state where about one million people live, our reporter says.

Youth leader Jonathan Omongu told the BBC Tuesday’s action was organised as a warning to Shell.

Nengi James, a Nembe chief and chairman of the area’s oil and gas committee, told the BBC that the protest followed a meeting on Monday between the community and Shell that ended in deadlock.

He said that, despite the area’s oil wealth, the community has little to show for it and the residents want Shell to provide electricity, water and schools.

Later on in the day, the chief told the BBC he had ordered the protesters to free the Shell workers on board the boats blocked by the protesters in the morning.

According to the Reuters news agency, 14 members of Shell staff were on the boats earlier in the day.

“No production was affected. No-one was kidnapped or seized,” a Shell spokesman told the BBC.

In a statement, Shell said it would continue to work to help improve the lives of the Nembe community which had already “resulted in the implementation of many projects in the area”.

SOURCE

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