by DantesPeak » Thu 09 Mar 2006, 13:17:21
Protests earlier shut down Exxon terminal, but latest reports say the protest has broken up.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3')/9/06 Agence Fr.-Presse 09:03:00
AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE ENGLISH WIRE
Copyright 2006 Agence France-Presse
Nigerian protesters besiege ExxonMobil export terminal
LAGOS, March 9, 2006 (AFP) - Protesters demanding jobs and local investment briefly besieged the US energy giant ExxonMobil's main Nigerian export terminal, a company spokesman said Thursday.
Wednesday's protest at the Qua Iboe Terminal in the southeastern state of Akwa Ibom was peaceful, but will raise further fears about the safety of Nigerian exports amid violent attacks elsewhere in the Niger Delta.
Nigeria's largest oil firm, the Anglo-Dutch major Shell, has been forced to cut 455,000 barrels per day of production since February 18, when separatist militants attacked the Forcados terminal and kidnapped nine foreign workers.
US giant Chevron has also cut 13,000 barrels per day following an attack on one of its pipelines, and in all around 20 percent of crude exports from Africa's largest supplier have been cut off.
"The youths came in some buses and set barricade at the Qua Iboe Terminal (QIT). Movement of staff was restricted for some 30 minutes," an ExxonMobil spokesman told AFP.
"Representatives from an organisation called Movement for the Survival of Ethnic Nationalities in the Niger Delta (MOSEND) held a peaceful rally outside.
"There were no injuries or impact on operations and the relevant security and government agencies have been informed," he added.
ExxonMobil is the second largest oil operator in Nigeria, accounting for 650,000 barrels out of the country's daily output of 2.6 million barrels, but its operations have been largely spared in recent militant attacks.