Nigeria will crack down on
groups responsible for recent pipeline attacks in the oil-producing
Delta region, President Muhammadu Buhari said on Wednesday.
Pipeline attacks and violence have been
on the rise in the southern swampland since authorities issued an arrest
warrant in January for a former militant leader on corruption charges.
“We will deal with them the way we dealt
with Boko Haram,” Buhari said during a visit to China, referring to
jihadists who have been waging an insurgency to set up an Islamic state
in the north.
The militants, like other Delta residents, demand a greater share of oil revenues.
PATIENCE
Addressing Nigerians living in China,
Buhari also asked for patience for his plans to end endemic graft and to
diversify the oil economy.
The former military ruler was elected
last year on a ticket to “fix” a country stricken by mismanagement. His
government has come under fire for fuel shortages and a lack of action
as the 2016 budget has been held up by wrangling with parliament.
“We hear proposals for short cuts or
quick wins,” he said. “However, all we need to do is look at our history
to know that there are no quick wins or short cuts in fixing Nigeria.”
A slump in oil revenues has whacked
public finances in Africa’s biggest economy. Buhari has also faced
criticism for rejecting a devaluation of the naira, which analysts have
said deters investment.
“Clearly, our vision of a diversified
and inclusive economy will not be achieved overnight,” he said. “It will
be a long, and in some cases, painful journey.”
The army has recaptured much of the
territory Boko Haram had held since Buhari took office in May 2015,
though the group still stages suicide bombings.
“I hope this message will reach the vandals and saboteurs who are blowing up pipelines and installations,” he said.
Last month gunmen blew up an oil
pipeline belonging to Italy’s ENI in the Delta, a region which provides
much of Nigeria’s oil production, killing three workers, according to
officials.
In February militants staged a
sophisticated underwater attack on a Shell pipeline, shutting down the
250,000 barrel-a-day Forcados export terminal.
Buhari has extended a multi-million
dollar amnesty signed with militants in 2009, but he has upset them by
ending generous pipeline protection contracts.
Credit:Reuters
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