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Africa: Subsaharan
Warlord Fuels Nigeria Oil Delta Fight
2004-07-01
OKOROTA, Middle-of-flipping-nowhere, Nigeria (AP) - Admirers call him Africa's Robin Hood of oil. Nigerian authorities call him an outlaw in the mold of Al Capone. Leading gunmen who worship a god of war, Alhaji Dokubo-Asari is trying to wrest the oil-rich Niger Delta away from multinational oil giants and the government - and put it into the hands of "the people." Although it's difficult to determine the strength of Dokubo-Asari's movement in the eastern delta, an Associated Press visit found the warlord leading a more organized campaign than previously realized. Dozens of his fighters, armed with AK-47 assault rifles, control the ruins of several towns and villages outside the key oil city of Port Harcourt.
Controlling ruins, there's a sure path to success.
It's often what happens when they're put into the hands of "the people."
Interesting how "the people" always turns into a dictatorship
"This is a broad-based armed struggle. If I die tomorrow, someone will take my place," said Dokubo-Asari, who says his heroes include South African anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela and al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden.
I don't know, let's find out.
A 40-year-old who converted to Islam as a university student, Dokubo-Asari commands an ethnically diverse mix of fighters who chiefly worship Allan Egbesu, the traditional god of war for Islamist fools ethnic Ijaw. Security analysts increasingly compare the scale of violence in the delta to Chechnya and Colombia. Militants from various ethnic groups and gangs of thugs roam much of the Scotland-sized delta, laying siege to oil pipelines, drilling rigs and export shipping terminals. They also fight soldiers and each other, often from speedboats mounted with automatic weapons.
Water-borne technicals.
Wonder where the money comes from? Speed boats aren't free...
Oil companies insist Dokubo-Asari's eastern-based campaign has yet to affect production. The impact has been in the west, where ethnic leaders battle for shares of the oil wealth. Dokubo-Asari is alone among the delta's faction leaders in openly challenging the government in Abuja led by President Olusegun Obasanjo, a retired general whose 1999 election ended 15 years of military rule. He, and others in the delta, accuse Obasanjo's government of rigging the president's 2003 re-election, squandering the country's $20 billion in annual oil revenues, and doing little for the people of the oil region.
"Why does he get to squander it? We want to squander it!"
Dokubo-Asari boasted of killing police and sailors - "in self-defense." It's an unusually brazen claim in Africa's most populous nation. Twice, in 1999 and 2001, the army killed hundreds of villagers in apparent retaliation for slayings of police by militants. Dokubo-Asari is idolized by some delta residents, who harbor bitter resentment toward Nigeria's government for the slow pace of development in oil-rich areas. Paved roads, electricity, running water, schools and hospitals remain scarce. "You can say he is like Robin Hood," said Angela Dickson, now living in Port Harcourt after fleeing the fighting. "Our own government is corrupt and they hate us." Dokubo-Asari said he admires terror leader bin Laden for fighting "on behalf of all Muslims," but insisted he is not fighting a religious war and never targets civilians.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
His opponents - including the government - brand Dokuko-Asari a mere thug who enriches himself through armed robbery and oil theft, forging self-serving alliances with other warlords and local politicians. Some people accuse his forces of summarily killing critics, including civilians who dared to speak out. "Think of Al Capone. It is no different," said Magnus Abe, information commissioner for Nigeria's Rivers state. Government officials say Dokubo-Asari finances his fighters by tapping oil pipelines to steal crude for sale locally and abroad. The practice, known as "bunkering," results in countrywide losses as high as 100,000 barrels a day, or about 5 percent of Nigeria's production. While defending bunkering by poor residents as morally "legitimate," Dokubo-Asari denied doing it. He said he sustains his movement with earnings from a "small oil refinery" run by his men.
Supplied with bunkered oil.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  "EGBESU! Love Him or Leave Him"

Bow to Cthulhu!
Posted by: Frank G   2004-07-01 11:12:32 PM  

#4  EGBESU! Love Him or Leave Him!
Posted by: borgboy   2004-07-01 10:51:00 PM  

#3  It's almost as if someone's spending money to destabilize a lot of the oil-producing areas. (Oh, and you can add Chechnya, Columbia, and Bolivia to the list).

Naaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh, that's just too paranoid...
Posted by: Phil Fraering   2004-07-01 1:14:28 PM  

#2  Why is it that the majority of OPEC nations, such as Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Venezuela ..etc are always involved in some of the worst geostrategic dilemmas in the dawning of the 21st century?
Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-07-01 3:42:20 AM  

#1  Savages killing each other.

Add modern technology and a worldwide economy for oil, slaves, aphrodisiacs--you name it--and you still get: savages killing each other.

Somehow, I'm not sure Islam always makes a whole lot of difference in terms of the importance of what happens in the darkest depts of Africa. Worshipping Alla(n) through the local incarnation of a war god makes it all the weirder and more kooky.

//nothing to see here, move along...//
Posted by: therien   2004-07-01 3:10:59 AM  

00:00