July 2,
2008: The newly elected government is
paying more attention to legal procedure in its pursuit of corrupt officials.
But everyone is finding that the previous president made a virtue of cutting
corners and getting things done (like cutting inflation, paying off the foreign
debt, eliminating legal and financial obstacles that hobbled agriculture, and
building power plants). But the cut corners allowed a lot of the corruption to
go on, and the new government is less interested in continuing economic reform,
than in seeing that the legal process is strictly followed. Maybe that's what
Nigeria needs, but the corrupt politicians have proved remarkably adaptive.
Meanwhile,
northern politicians blame southern leaders for allowing the situation to get
out of control in the oil region, losing billions of dollars worth of oil
exports, money that is shared by all. Corrupt politicians cannot steal money
for oil that is not exported. Currently, oil exports, worth over $20 billion a
year, are halted because of MEND attacks and theft from pipelines. MEND (a
coalition of gangs who have prospered
stealing oil) and local tribal chiefs want more of the oil money. State and
national politicians have been stealing most of it for decades, and the tribes
are fed up with the pollution and poverty. Armed with guns, and equipped with
boats and radios bought with stolen oil, the gangs are a power to be reckoned
with. The army and navy have not been able to destroy the gangs, or prevent all
attacks on oil facilities. The gangs threaten to try and take down all oil
production if they don't get a piece of the action.
June 30,
2008: In the Niger Delta, a boatload of
gunmen went on a rampage, firing at other boats, and people on land, leaving at
least nine dead and many more wounded. The gunmen escaped by taking their boat
into the complex system of waterways in the Delta swamps.
June 25,
2008: Repairs have been made, and oil
shipments have resumed from the Bonga offshore platform that was attacked last
week.
June 24,
2008: Oil region rebels group MEND has
declared a unilateral ceasefire, effective today, apparently in reaction to the
new military offensive against them. The military is still going after the
gangs.
June 23,
2008: The navy has sent two patrol boats
(each armed with two 30mm automatic cannon and a crew of fifty) to patrol the
waters between the mainland the offshore oil facilities. These two boats don't make a huge difference,
as MEND speedboats are faster.
June 21,
2008: President Umaru Yar'Adua ordered
the military to shut down MEND using any means necessary. The government was
preparing for peace talks with MEND next month, and sees the Bonga attack as
not in the spirit of peace negotiations.
June 20,
2008: In the Moslem north there has been
a nine-fold increase (over last year) in polio cases. Nigeria now accounts for
over 80 percent of the cases of the wild strain of polio. Cases caused by this
strain of the disease have shown up in neighboring Benin and Niger, and further
spread is feared. The vaccination campaign has not been able to undo the damage
done by Moslem religious fanatics who, five years ago, spread rumors that polio
vaccinations were a Western plot to poison Moslems. This interrupted, for over
a year, a world wide effort to wipe out polio. Like smallpox (which was wiped
out in a similar campaign three decades ago) the polio virus can only survive
in human hosts. If enough vulnerable
people (mostly kids) are vaccinated against polio, then polio has nowhere to
survive, and joins smallpox as an extinct disease. The Islamic campaign against
vaccinations caused a resurgence of polio cases worldwide, and a major loss of
credibility for the Islamic radicals. The vaccinations resumed, after vigorous
efforts by Nigerian politicians. This effort is being thwarted by the lingering
effects of the Islamic conservatives in northern Nigeria. Currently, about four
percent of the Nigerian population refuses to let their kids be vaccinated
because of the five year old anti-vaccination rumor campaign. The rumors have
acquired a life of their own, and just might be able to prevent the complete
eradication of polio. So far, the Islamic conservatives actions five years ago
have resulted in over 2,000 children getting polio and becoming paralyzed. Some
400-500 children, mainly in Nigeria, are still catching polio because of the
Nigerian parents who refuse to allow vaccinations.
June 19,
2008: For the first time, rebels (MEND
took credit) attacked one of the offshore oil well complexes. The Bonga complex
is 120 kilometers offshore, and the attack caused it to be shut down. That
stopped 220,000 barrels of oil a day, nearly ten percent of Nigeria's
production. That's a loss of over $25 million a day. The attackers sought to
destroy the control room, but security measures kept them from getting in. So,
instead, the rebels blew up some of the pipeline system used to move the oil
around. Oil companies had been building more of their facilities on off-shore
pipelines, because of the improved security. Even though MEND demonstrated it
could come out this far to attack, the offshore facilities remain easier to
defend. During the Bonga raid, an American oil worker was kidnapped, but
released a few days later.