Warri - (Nigeria) Niger Delta Greenland Justice Mandate on Monday claimed an
attack on a crude oil pipeline in Delta state, southern Nigeria, in the second
attack on the same line in less than a week.
In an emailed statement, the NDGJM Freedom Fighters spokesman
Aldo Agbalaja said “Opudo strike force, at about 11:30 pm on Sunday, September
18, 2016, struck the Afiesere-Ekiugbo delivery line in Ughelli, operated by
NPDC/Shoreline.”
The group hit the same pipeline last Tuesday and vowed to
“ground” the Nigerian economy, which is already in recession, in part due to
plummeting oil exports as a result of sabotage.
Ratings agency Standard & Poor’s cut Nigeria’s credit rating
last week, saying the “marked contraction” in oil production from an average of
2.1 million barrels per day to 1.7 was hurting its economic prospects.
The NDGJM has stepped up its attacks after rival group the Niger
Delta Avengers declared a ceasefire in August and entered talks with the
Nigerian government.
“All agrarian products in the area surrounding the scene of the
incident have been damaged as a result of the blast,” a resident of the nearby
Ekuigbo community, Efemena Akposire, told AFP.
A military officer added: “Unlike previous attacks carried out
by the group where they hack-sawed the pipeline, dynamite was used in this
case.”
Nigeria’s military has boosted its presence in the oil-producing
southern swamplands in response to the attacks, raiding suspected militant
camps and clamping down on illegal oil refineries.
Various Freedom Fighting groups have complained about poor
living conditions in the area, where despite massive oil wealth most people
live in poverty without access to basic services such as education and health
care.
Distrust in the Nigerian security forces is widespread in the
region. Last week the NDGJM complained of intimidation and vowed to “match
force with the oppressor’s brutality”.
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