October 11, 2007:
The military has restored peace
to much of the Niger River area, at least as far as oil facilities are
concerned. As a result, oil companies are returning to abandoned oil operations
and putting the equipment back in working order. This is expected to increase
oil production by 23 percent over the next twelve months. That's about half a
million more barrels a day. At $80 a barrel, that's a lot more money for
government officials to steal.
The oil money has become a curse for Nigeria, as
has been the case in most poor countries similarly "blessed."
Politicians that get into office, particularly at the state level (there are 36
states, containing 140 million people), tend to begin stealing on a large
scale. State boundaries tend to incorporate a minimal number of tribes, and the
citizens are easy to manipulate if you buy off some people, and terrorize the
rest. Moreover, state governors are immune from prosecution while in office. So
the governors hire local thugs to do their dirty work, and order the corrupt
cops to leave the governors thugs alone. The federal government, which is
nearly as corrupt, as begun to go after corrupt governors, especially the more
notorious ones, after they have left office. Western countries have cooperated
by not allowing former governors from fleeing Nigeria, to a comfortable (thanks
to all the stolen public money) exile. Increasingly, Nigerians are becoming
violent over the bad government. But the corrupt officials, knowing that vast
wealth is theirs if they can only deal with the unruly populace, have been
coming up with new tricks to do just that. It's an incentive system from hell.
October 6, 2007:
A British kidnap victim was freed by police, after a member of the gang
was arrested and provided information on where the gang hideouts were. In the meantime, kidnappers are turning more
to relatives of corrupt politicians, as these are easier targets, and likely to
result in a substantial ransom payment.
October 3, 2007: In the north, anti-Christian
violence continues. The most recent outbreak came about when paranoid Moslem
high school students accused Christian students of planning an attack on a
mosque. This led to attacks on the Christian minority in the northern Kano
state (which is mostly Moslem), the death of nine Christians, the wounding of
61 others. Some 500 Christians were forced to flee their homes, and nine
churches were burned down. Islamic radical preachers in the north are
constantly preaching against the Christian "war on Islam," even
though nearly all the religious violence in the world is Moslems attacking
non-Moslems.