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Nigeria to name new operator for Shell wells in Ogoniland

Wednesday, June 4th 2008 - 21:00 UTC
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Oil fields abandoned by Royal Dutch Shell in Nigeria's Ogoniland in the Niger Delta 15 years ago will be given to another oil company this year, President Umaru Yar'Adua said on Wednesday during a visit to South Africa, according to press reports.

Shell closed its operations in the area in 1993 due largely to popular protests over pollution and lack of development. The protests were spearheaded by a rights group the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), whose leader Ken Saro-Wiwa was executed by the then-military government in 1995. "There is a total loss of confidence between Shell and Ogoni people" Yar'Adua said at a meeting with the Nigerian community in Cape Town. "Another operator acceptable to the Ogonis will take over. Nobody is going to gain from the conflict and stalemate, so this is the best solution". A deal has already been reached with Shell to compensate the Ogoni people for degrading their environment, Yar'Adua said. However Shell said it was yet to receive any official communication on the government's decision to transfer the Ogoni oil wells to another company. "We have seen media reports today ... about government's decision over our interests in Ogoni. We can confirm that we have not received any formal notification about this development and are therefore unable to comment further at this time," a Shell spokeswoman in Nigeria said. MOSOP had accused Shell of trying to resume oil and gas production without Ogoni consent after a government-backed peace process failed to reconcile the two parties. Shell denies the charges and said it only wanted to secure wells that have been dormant since 1993 and its oil pipelines that crisscross Ogoniland. Villagers staged a protest against Shell in March when MOSOP said the company was trying to force its way back to Ogoniland. Protesters in the village of K-Dere attacked a major oil pipeline that feeds Shell's Bonny export terminal twice in May 2007, forcing the company to close about 170.000 barrels per day. Shell has been in Nigeria since 1956 when oil was first discovered and is the main operator in the country with Nigeria becoming the eighth world exporter and Africa's main producer.

Categories: Energy & Oil, International.

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