ID | 094765 |
Title Proper | Liberation movements and rising violence in the Niger delta |
Other Title Information | the new contentious site of oil and environmental politics |
Language | ENG |
Author | Omotola, J Shola |
Publication | 2010. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The contest for the 'soul' of oil and its revenues in Nigeria have thrown up several actors representing diverse interests, most notably the stale, oil multinationals and oil-hearing communities. This paper is primarily concerned with what it called the new contentious site of oil and environmental polities in the Niger Delta. The contention revolves mainly around the interpretations ascribed to the current but unprecedented wave of violence in the region by the contending forces in oil and environmental politics. In the reading of militias' activities, there is a simultaneous convergence and divergence between the state and the oil majors. Both refuse to attribute rising violence to liberation struggles, as claimed by the militants. They, however, differ over the best tactical approach to the problem. The oil majors seem to prefer a more violent approach to taming the monster, which violence in the Niger Delta has become. This is in sharp contradiction to the states' preference for a relatively less violent approach. This 'new' disposition of the state makes it all the more interesting, given the fact that the Nigerian state is notoriously reputed for its excesses in the Niger Delta over dissent. Overall, rising violence in the Niger Delta represents the continuation of the resource struggle by another means. Notable criminal tendencies became inevitable due to the insensitivity of the government and in order to sustain the struggle. |
`In' analytical Note | Studies in Conflict and Terrorism Vol. 33, No. 1; Jan 2010: p.36 - 54 |
Journal Source | Studies in Conflict and Terrorism Vol. 33, No. 1; Jan 2010: p.36 - 54 |
Key Words | Liberation Movements ; Violence ; Niger Delta ; Environmental Politics ; Oil ; Nigeria |