April 27, 2007:
The government used the oil revenue, which is over two-thirds of of government
income, to buy the recent elections. At the lowest levels, local operatives
were offered a few dollars for each "vote" they delivered. Methods
were left to the local party members, who did everything from having pre-marked
ballots printed, then seizing polling places by force, to paying off individual
voters to cooperate. With over $50 billion in oil revenues to play with each
year, politicians can easily justify spending a billion or so on rigging
elections. The stolen oil money is spread around, with about ten percent of the
population getting some of it, and doing what needs to be done to keep the
thieving politicians in power. The majority of Nigerians get nothing, and the
better armed politicians dare anyone to do anything about it. But the current
government claimed to be reformers, and blamed all the former problems on
corrupt military dictators. With it now obvious that, as the generals so often
claimed, that civilian politicians are no better than the military dictators,
what is to be done? The ruling party believes that, as long as they keep
spreading the oil money around, the senior politicians can get rich and ignore
the needs of population. The election was stolen fair and square, and the
thieves are going to get away with it.
April 25, 2007:
Violence in the Niger River Delta oil region continues to increase, with
18 major attacks on oil facilities so far this year. The oil companies and the
government are laying on more security, but the local gangs are still powerful
enough to launch large enough attacks to overwhelm the defenses of many oil
company facilities. The gangs are looking for foreigners to kidnap, and the oil
companies are now forced to pay higher and higher "danger bonuses" to
attract needed technical personnel. Not
all the violence is directed at the oil companies and government forces. Tribes
will fight each other over jobs and other benefits handed out by the oil
companies. One such conflict today left five dead and over a dozen wounded.
April 23, 2007:
A brazenly fraudulent vote elected most of the candidates the ruling
party put up. This included the new president, Umaru Yar'Adu, a Moslem from the
north. Opposition parties are demanding a new vote, but are unlikely to get it
unless they fight for it. And even then, the effort is likely to fail.
April 21, 2007:
The election campaign left over 400 dead, and many more wounded. Gangs
hired by candidates used violence to intimidate opposition voters and party
workers. The local (April 14) and national (April 21) elections were to be the
first peaceful transition from one elected civilian government to another in
Nigerian history. The vote, however, was not "free and fair" with all
the muscle being applied.
April 20, 2007:
Two Turkish engineers, kidnapped in the Niger River Delta oil region,
were released, apparently after a ransom was paid.