Oil minister said repairs to oil facilities lifted output to nearly 1.8 million bpd in December |
A group of former
Nigerian militants said on Sunday it had lost confidence in the president's
efforts to end attacks on oil facilities in the Niger Delta, a major goal in efforts
to reach a lasting peace settlement.
Reuters
report continues:
In
its first public criticism of President Muhammadu Buhari, the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) said he was "jeopardizing the
fragile peace in the region" with public comments about the unrest while
reneging on past agreements.
MEND
had backed Buhari in his 2015 presidential election campaign and urged
militants behind the most recent spate of attacks to pursue peace talks with
the government.
The
attacks in the OPEC member's energy hub, coupled with low oil prices, have
helped to push Africa's biggest economy into recession - the first in 25 years.
Crude oil sales account for two-thirds of government revenue.
Those
behind the attacks, which began in early 2016, say they want a greater share of
Nigeria's energy wealth to go to the southern region. The frequency of attacks
has reduced since Buhari held talks with community leaders but there are
sporadic attacks, most recently in late November.
MEND,
which was one of largest militant groups until it signed up for a government
amnesty in 2009, said in a statement emailed on Sunday that it had passed
"a vote of no confidence" in Buhari's government.
It
said he should tell government agencies to "immediately commence dialogue
with the Niger Delta region" but did not say what it would do if the
approach to the peace process was not altered.
MEND's
members are influential in the Niger Delta but it is unclear whether this
extends to those responsible for the most recent attacks because the militant
scene is splintered into small groups which each have their own list of
demands.
The
presidency declined to comment on MEND's statement. Buhari said in his New
Year's message on Saturday that he will seek a peace settlement in the
oil-producing region.
The attacks cut Nigeria's oil production, which stood at 2.1 million barrels per day (bpd) at the start of 2016, by more than a third in the summer although the oil minister said repairs to oil facilities lifted output to nearly 1.8 million bpd in December.
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