Dr. Jack Wheeler
March 15, 2006
Nigeria is a large country in western Africa, more than twice the size of California with an enormous population of almost 130 million. It is a make-believe country, a colonial construction of the 19th century British cobbling together 250 ethnic groups for the imperial heck of it. The northern half of the place is mostly Moslem, the southern half mostly Christian or animist.
Nigeria is the most corrupt country in the world. Bottomlessly, hopelessly corrupt. It is also one of the world's biggest oil producers, pumping out 2.4 million barrels per day (bpd), providing the country's greatest source of revenue. An overwhelming portion of the oil billions are ripped off by government officials and their cronies. The tiniest fraction goes to the people who live where the oil is produced.
That's the Delta region of the Niger, the river after which Nigeria is named. Inhabited by the Christian-animist Ijaw and Ibo tribes, there are almost no roads, schools, hospitals, or employment. It should be no surprise that a full-on armed guerrilla insurgency has emerged among these people - and their target is the oil installations.
Production is currently down 556,000 barrels to below 1.8 million bpd. The pipelines supplying gas to Nigeria's power stations have been blown causing a drastic reduction in national electricity output from 4,500 megawatts to 2,500. Large areas of the country are now experiencing blackouts.
Yesterday (Wednesday 3/16), Nigeria's Power and Steel Minister Liyel Imoke announced that the power blackout will continue "for some time," because repair workers accompanied by military forces "have not been able to access the vandalized areas of the gas pipeline. The situation is beyond our control."
Sounds just like Iran.
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