A coalition of militants in the Niger Delta
who had previously vowed to attack Nigerian oil and gas pipelines if their
demands were not met by October 1st,
has agreed to rescind their threats on the fossil fuel
infrastructure in the delta.
Abuja held several closed-door meetings with the
coalition on Thursday, after which the group declared its loyalty to the Pan
Niger Delta Forum, which is negotiating with the federal government to increase
the proportion of oil revenues used to develop the oil-rich delta.
“Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), the Coalition of Niger Delta
Agitators, which comprises over 250 groups with their leaders and
representatives present at yesterday’s meeting, officially withdraw our quit
notice issued to the Northerners and Yorubas living in Niger Delta region; call
off planned resumption of attacks on oil and gas installations across the Niger
Delta region and beyond from September 10, 2017; suspend the October 1, 2017
declaration of the Niger Delta Republic; declare support for the Pan Niger
Delta Forum,” an official statement by the group said. “We have also resolved to work
with PANDEF and give it our maximum support and we urge the federal government
to continue a dialogue and implement the 16-point demand presented by PANDEF on
behalf of the Niger Delta region.”
News of the rescinded threat comes as foreign
companies start reinvesting in Nigeria after a year of high
militant activity in the delta in 2016. Shell has begun pumping natural gas from the second phase of
development at the Gbaran-Ubie Niger Delta project at the end of last month.
The gas from the expanded project will go to both the local market and export
markets and will be transported via a new pipeline connecting the central
processing facility at Gbaran-Ubie to a non-associated gas plant.
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