Posted on 10/31/2004 6:22:28 PM PST by Flavius
LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -- Unions declared the top oil multinational here, Royal Dutch/Shell, "an enemy of the Nigerian people" on Sunday and called a Nov. 16 nationwide strike that they said would target oil exports in Africa's oil giant.
ADVERTISEMENT The threats in the world's No. 7 oil exporter -- the fifth largest supplier of U.S. oil imports -- appeared likely to send new shocks through the global oil price market.
Unions called the Nov. 16 strike after giving President Olusegun Obasanjo until Sunday to reverse September's 23 percent increase in fuel prices in Nigeria.
Union leaders singled out Royal Dutch/Shell Group, Nigeria's largest petroleum producer. They said the firm planned to take the country's white-collar oil union to court on Monday, in an attempt to prevent it from striking.
Shell officials would not comment on the matter and government officials could not be reached.
"We have resolved to declare Shell an enemy of the Nigerian people," Adams Oshiomhole, leader of the main Nigeria Labor Congress, told reporters.
"Shell will be treated as an enemy. We have the capacity to engage them," Oshiomhole said, without elaborating.
An October general strike over the fuel price increases paralyzed business overall but left petroleum exports unaffected.
The strike helped push oil prices past the $50 a barrel mark globally.
"The last time we did not target oil exports because we expected the government to listen," Brown Ogbeifun, president of the union for Nigeria's white-collar oil workers, said.
"Now that the government will not listen, we have no option but to target exports," Ogbeifun said.
Nigeria exports 2.5 million barrels a day.
Strikes in Nigeria often are violent, at times deadly.
Separately, gangs and ethnic militias vying for local shares of the oil wealth repeatedly have targeted foreign oil producers with kidnappings, takeovers and sabotage.
In March 2003, fighting between rival ethnic militia groups near the port city of Warri -- which also drew in government troops -- forced oil companies to shut down 40 percent of Nigeria's oil exports for weeks. Much of that oil remains shut off.
(Substitutes second paragraph to correct that Nigeria is fifth largest supplier of U.S. oil imports.)
Oh yeah and it will push Natural Gas prices way the h.ll up...
But its ok because adjusted for inflation oil is free... So dont worry 'bout it
The strike won't last. Everybody is sniping at oil while being fully aware that oil is the economic lifeblood of the entire planet. Don't get in the way of oil, you won't even be a footnote in history.
"...hope everyone is oil..."
- - -
Yes.
I am oil.
I know it... forgot to say in oil...
Bush's fault, blah, blah, blah....
I broker Nigerian Bonny Light Crude Oil on a daily basis. The strike probably won't last long but I will say that Shell has been screwing the Nigerians for years. It's time the Nigerian government toss Shell out on their collective butts.
There are probably a couple dozen companies that could buy out the Shell plant in Nigeria if Shell wants out.
"We have resolved to declare Shell an enemy of the Nigerian people,"
So they will not get a pay check while on strike but they are trying to hurt their employer... who probably pays wages above the average in Africa.
Typical union stupidity.
"oil is the economic lifeblood of the entire planet."
Yes it is, and a good thing. Being traded on global markets, it means no country of consequence(such as China, e.g.) has anything to gain by instability or runaway prices.
Which also means, any producer country with delusions of grandeur will be without powerful friends but have several powerful antagonists.
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