Nigeria: Women of Idheze shut down Agip’s oil facilities
We had already shared (see WRM's bulletin
Nº 111) what the ‘Operation Climate Change’ -- launched on January
1, 1999 -- did in the Niger Delta: activists shut down oil flow
stations and gas flares. In response, many houses were destroyed,
people were killed and women were raped. However, the struggle
continued and mainly women started a joint campaign to protect
life by putting a stop to the depredations of Big Oil. They won
a fight: in January 2006 Nigerian courts ordered Shell to stop
the flaring of natural gas in Ogoniland.
Now, they have gone for more. Women
of Idheze community in Isoko South Local Council of Delta State
have again shut down oil facilities of the Nigeria Agip Oil Company
(NAOC) alleging failure to pay compensation for damages caused
by chemical/waste fluid of the firm flushed into the community.
Recently, chemical/waste from the rig
site was discharged into the swamp of Idheze leading to the death
and destruction of aquatic life. Many dead aquatic animals were
still afloat in the ponds during the following days.
The women had early in December 2006
seized oil facilities belonging to Agip, owing to the failure
of the company to implement an earlier agreement signed with the
community on their entrance into their land.
They revealed that a spill led to the
death of seven adults and three children and also destroyed economic
trees and crops in 1982.
The women carried placards, barricaded
the main entrance of the company's facilities and turned back
all workers. Some of the placards bore inscriptions such as: "We
are tired of the inhuman treatment of NAOC", "We will
continue to disrupt your activities until you meet our demands",
"Pay compensation for the chemical/waste fluid you have used
to pollute our land."
The women came to the premises with
their utensils and food items, including bags of rice, yams, garri
as well as canopies with which they erected makeshift tents. They
vowed not to vacate the yard until their demands were met.
According to them, after all that the
community suffered as a result of the spill, Agip has refused
to heed the advice of the inspectorate body of the Nigeria National
Petroleum Company (NNPC) which ordered Agip to compensate the
community.
Leader of the protesters, Mrs. Mercy
Okunwa, who spoke on behalf of the community's President-General,
Joel Ogbru, accused the company of insensitivity to the plight
of the locals as well as reneging on agreement reached with the
community in Port Harcourt last December.
She said the non-challant attitude of
NAOC to the issues of their community, led to a protest by the
community on December 19, 2006 to register their "vexation
but until now none of the promises made by NAOC when they invited
the community people has been implemented".
She disclosed that many of the servicing
companies operating in the rigs were "carrying out the job
with the knowledge of Agip but detrimental to the community because
none of them pays royalty to the community."
They accused servicing firms such as
SERIC, IMPEANTI, and KCA Deutage for flouting outrightly, agreements
reached with the community, saying that Agip conspired with some
of the servicing firms to rob the community of their entitlements.
She lamented that contracts that should have been given to the
indigenes were executed by outsiders.
"We are peace-loving people and
knowing that Agip has been deceiving us, we wouldn't want anything
that will be detrimental this time to our people and so until
the company's management responds to our demand, we will not vacate
the premises," the aggrieved women declared.
Article based on: “Women protesters
shut oil facility as toxic waste ravages community”, Chido Okafor,
Warri, sent by Oilwatch, e-mail: info@oilwatch.org