Nigeria
is asking the United States to help it improve security in the Niger
Delta. Vice President Goodluck Jonathan says US expertise is needed to restore
order following increased attacks on oil facilities by militants. The
appeal comes on the heels of another attack at a Shell Petroleum Development
Company facility at Oloma in which four soldiers and three civilians were
killed.
Mojaheed
Dokubo Asari is the leader of the main militant group the Niger Delta Peoples
Volunteer Force. He told VOA English to Africa reporter Chinedu Offor the
security situation in the region will shortly take a turn for the worse. “The
security situation is very, very precarious. Life is not safe. The soldiers are
there harassing innocent people. I just left a police check-point a few minutes
ago.”
Asari denies allegations that his group was
behind the escalating attacks on oil installations and foreign workers. “The
members of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force and the Joint Revolutionary
Council are not involved. Initially we were not in support of the actions
carried out by certain groups, but today it is affecting all of us and there is
nothing we can do but to give support to those who are fighting, because if you
are not fighting, you will also be hunted down.
Asari says because of the
government actions, his group will no longer take part in the proposed peace
summit for the region. "The issue is even if we are not involved and our people
are attacked, we have no other option than to defend ourselves. The security
situation is very tense in the Delta: there are several roadblocks; there are
lot of searches going on and some of them are very humiliating."