Royal Dutch Shell has evacuated four
oil facilities in Nigeria in response to a sudden
intensification in the militia violence which plagues
the western delta.
The withdrawal of 326 staff and
contract workers from the remote flow stations in the swampy
region comes after the centres were shut down following a bomb
attack on the pipeline linking them to the main export terminal
last week.The
evacuation will delay repairs to the pipe which carries 106,000
barrels a day, around 10 per cent of Shell's oil output from
Nigeria. The move has raised fears that international companies
may permanently quit the turbulent delta area if the
Government, a key Western oil ally, fails to rein in the
militias.
Industry sources say that Shell
is considering further evacuations although the company today
said that it has no plans for a wider pull-out.
The withdrawal, combined with
Iran's threats to force up prices in response to threatened
sanctions over its nuclear programme, prompted a rise in the
cost of oil, up 93 cents to $63.18 a barrel this morning.
Royal Dutch Shell has been in a
long-standing dispute with impoverished locals who accuse the
company of failing to invest in their region, where an estimated
20 million people live in poverty alongside the
multi-billion-dollar oil industry.
Heavily armed members of the
Ijaw ethnic group killed at least one person and injured ten
others on the Benisede flowstation in Bayelse State in an
early-morning raid on a Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC)
platform yesterday, the fourth such attack in five days.
The attackers invaded in speed
boats, set fire to two houseboats used as staff accommodation
and smashed part of the processing facility before fleeing.
In an e-mail statement, the
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, also believed
to be behind the kidnapping of four foreign oil workers last
week, said that it had 5,000 fighters and was intent on
crippling the local activities of the world's eighth largest oil
exporter. "Our aim is to totally destroy the capacity of the
Nigerian government to export oil," it said.
Shell, which has 12,000 workers
in Nigeria, has addressed its concerns to President Olusegun
Obasanjo's Government which will be under further pressure to
crack down on the indigenous militia who are demanding more
control over the region's oil revenues.
The Government has yet to
launch a military assault, fearing for the safety of the four
foreign workers - a Briton, American, Bulgarian and Honduran -
who were kidnapped from an offshore oil platform on Wednesday
last week.
A spokeswoman
for Shell said: "Following the growing insecurity in the area,
SPDC has commenced evacuation of personnel on duty from Benisede,
and three neighbouring flowstations (Opukushi, Ogbotobo and Tunu)."
The spokeswoman
said that all four flow stations had been shut down following
the explosion at the Trans Ramos pipeline on January 11.
"There is no
new net impact on production as a result of this incident. Some
106,000 barrels per day of the SPDC joint-venture remains
shut-in," she said.
She added: "A
number of people have been given medical attention and about 10
persons are currently being hospitalised at the Shell hospital
in Warri.There are reports of fatalities but we are only able to
confirm one SPDC catering contractor staff fatality at this
time. We cannot give further comments on reported non-SPDC cases
and we are cooperating fully with the authorities."
She said that there were no
current plans to permanently withdraw from the Delta region
although it was not clear when workers would return.
"Following the general
insecurity in the Benisede area, the company thought it prudent
to minimise the risk to personnel by evacuating staff from the
station and neighbouring fields."
The latest attacks have
coincided with increased political tension across Nigeria as
senior figures in Mr Obasanjo's People's Democratic Party jostle
for position before national elections in 2007, their rivalry
occasionally resulting in bloodshed.