Chief Thomas Ekpemupolo Photo credit: Paul Iseme/image source: lindaikeji’sblog |
The father of a former
Nigerian militant leader has died after sustaining injuries during a government
military campaign aimed at halting attacks on infrastructure in the
oil-producing Delta region, his spokesman said late on Wednesday.
Reuters
report continues:
Government
Ekpemupolo, known as Tompolo, is a commander of the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), a group that spearheaded attacks on oil
and gas installations in Nigeria's Delta region in the early 2000s until a
government amnesty programme halted the attacks by offering contracts to
protect pipelines and oil production equipment.
His
84-year-old father, Chief Thomas Ekpemupolo, died at a hospital in Warri, Delta
state, as a result of injuries sustained during military incursions into his
community, a spokesman for Tompolo said.
Comment
from the government was not immediately available.
The
death may inflame hostilities in the oil-rich region, which kicked off not long
after an arrest warrant was issued for Tompolo in January on charges of
corruption.
The
violence has shut down more than 700,000 barrels per day of oil production and
exacerbated an economic crisis in a nation reeling from its first recession in
two decades. Tompolo has denied any involvement in the attacks on oil and gas
infrastructure, as well as the corruption charges. He remains in hiding.
While
oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu said were progressing with various militant
groups over a ceasefire, the military is simultaneously waging a campaign aimed
at stamping out attackers. Locals have criticized the efforts as heavy handed,
and said they risk fuelling more dissent, while other militant groups have said
they run contrary to the ceasefire talks.
In a statement on Wednesday, the Niger Delta Avengers, the group that has claimed responsibility for bulk of the attacks this year, but recently declared a ceasefire, said the military campaign will "undermine any genuine disposition from your government towards restoration of tranquility in the Niger Delta."
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