“We started noticing crude oil on our land only to be told that it is as a result of a spill from a trunk line conveying crude from Isoko to the Eriemu manifold,” says Victor Emuherie, leader of a youth movement in the affected village of Agbarha-Otor.
The populous Niger Delta region on the Gulf of Guinea has for decades seen attacks by local militants on oil installations run by the NPDC and by foreign oil giants, causing successive governments to deploy troops.
The NDGJM warned that their attack was only a foretaste of its activities to come and urged multinational companies “to evacuate their personnel”.
The government last week resumed payments of allowances to former fighters under an amnesty scheme, notably ex-rebels of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
MEND is a historic armed movement demanding reparations and a fair share of oil revenue for residents of the Niger Delta, which has seen spin-offs by radicals who want independence for the region and refuse to recognise Muhammadu Buhari, a northerner, as president.
Attacks by another group, the Niger Delta Avengers, have led to a sharp fall in oil production since the start of the year in a country already hit by tumbling prices for crude, which accounts for 70% of state revenue.