
Hundreds of protesters stormed a
Nigerian facility owned by Chevron on Wednesday demanding better jobs
and forcing staff to be airlifted out, community leaders said.
Protesters from Ugborodo village, which
is close to Chevron’s Escravos terminal, want the company to relocate
more of its Nigerian offices to the southern Delta state to secure work
for people living in the oil-producing swampland.
“Our people are casual workers in their
own land,” Collins Edema, president of the National Association of
Itsekiri Graduates, a community group, told AFP.
Speaking from the facility, Ofe Nene
said that “400 protesters” were inside the Chevron yard while hundreds
of others were outside.
“We have been here since yesterday and
will continue to be here for as long as possible until Chevron gives in
to our demands,” said Nene, a youth leader.
Chevron workers were evacuated from the facility in helicopters and planes, said a security staff member.
“A plane just landed 40 minutes back to continue evacuation of top staff,” he said.
“This is in addition to other staff who were earlier evacuated with the use of choppers.”
Ugborodo villagers have a history of
staging protests against Chevron. Their complaints — focussing on jobs,
community development and pollution — have stayed the same over the
years.
In a famous 2002 protest, hundreds of Ugborodo women demanding more jobs staged a peaceful protest at Escravos lasting days.
Today protests aren’t the only headache
for oil companies operating in the region. This year has seen an
increase in attacks on oil infrastructure by armed militants demanding
greater political autonomy for the region and a bigger cut of oil
revenues.
A new militant group named the Niger
Delta Avengers has claimed a series of attacks that have strangled
Nigerian oil production at a time when the government desperately needs
the mone
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