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Nigerian militants1 in the restive2 Niger Delta3 appear to be making good their promise to cripple the country's petroleum4 industry, targeting oil company employees and attacking facilities in the oil-rich region. Gilbert da Costa in Abuja reports the Nigerian authorities are playing down the likelihood of a major military response to recent attacks.
Nigerian militants are on the offensive again; blowing up oil pipelines5 and seizing oil workers. Violent attacks and kidnappings targeting oil companies are now a frequent occurrence in the Niger Delta.
Some are carried out by rebels claiming to be fighting for a greater share of the region's oil wealth for local people, others by criminal gangs out to make ransom6 money. More than 200 foreigners have been seized in the Niger Delta since early 2006. Almost all have been released unharmed.
Security forces protecting the oil industry have also come under frequent attacks, an indication, some say, that government security forces are losing control in the area. Military crackdowns have had little effect on the rebellion. But the Nigerian chief of defense7 staff, General Owoye Azazi, says the mandate8 of the military in the Niger Delta is to contain the insurgency9.
"The military has a role of stabilizing10 the environment in the Niger Delta for political solutions, for economic solutions. The military is not conducting an all-out warfare11. So there are constraints12. You are talking about operating in communities where you have about 98- to 99-percent law-abiding citizens and a few other elements," he said. "So how do you operate fairly to justify13 whatever action you are going to take? So those are the conditions under which the military operate in the Niger Delta."
Oil production has slowed due to sabotage14 and President Umaru YarAdua is under pressure to halt what has become a major problem for the government. The government's attempts to negotiate a settlement with rebels have collapsed15.
The picture is complicated by a web of vested interest, from local warlords, corrupt17 local politicians and federal officials benefiting from a multi-million-dollar trade in stolen crude, and members of the security forces accused of gun-running.
The conflict has simmered for more than a decade and analysts18 fear using a military option could further complicate16 the crisis.
Local media reports say the Nigerian military killed 12 rebels and arrested about 60 last week in a crackdown to end criminal activities in the region. A military task force protecting oil workers and facilities carried out the raids.
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