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Nigerian oil rebels reject peace talks, claim new attack

By AFP
Nigeria Most of the recent attacks on oil facilities in the oil-rich south have been claimed by the Niger Delta Avengers NDA, who want a fairer share of revenue from the sector for local people.  By Stefan Heunis AFPFile
JUN 8, 2016 LISTEN
Most of the recent attacks on oil facilities in the oil-rich south have been claimed by the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA), who want a fairer share of revenue from the sector for local people. By Stefan Heunis (AFP/File)

Lagos (AFP) - The Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) militant group on Wednesday rejected a truce offer to end attacks on key oil infrastructure that has cut output in Nigeria, and claimed another strike.

The NDA wrote on its Twitter account @NDAvengers: "We're not negotiating with any committee. If (the) federal government is discussing with any group they're doing that on their own."

It added that it had blown up a Chevron well called "RMP 20" next to the Dibbi flow station in the Warri area of Delta State at about 1:00 am (0000 GMT) on Wednesday.

There was no immediate confirmation of the attack from the company while the Nigerian Navy, which has been involved in security operations in the region, said it did not have details.

But spokesman Commodore Chris Ezekobe told AFP nine suspected militants blamed for previous attacks around the port city of Warri had been arrested.

"The suspects include the mastermind of recent attacks on Shell's Forcados trunkline and Chevron's Escravos pipeline," he added.

Ezekobe said a cache of arms, ammunition and bomb-making equipment was also seized.

The Avengers have attacked facilities operated by the Nigerian subsidiaries of Shell, Eni, Chevron, and the state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) since the start of the year.

Nigeria's government this week announced it had set up a committee headed by the national security advisor to open talks with the rebels to bring an end to the repeated attacks.

Junior oil minister Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu also said military operations to hunt down the group in the creeks and swamps of the oil-rich delta region in the south had been scaled back.

The violence over poverty in the region and repeated oil spills has slashed production to 1.6 million barrels per day, well below the budgeted-for 2.2 million bpd, Kachikwu said on Monday.

The NDA is believed to have sympathies for a former oil rebel leader active in the region in the 2000s and who is now wanted on money laundering and corruption charges.

It has also pressed for self-determination for the Niger delta region but maintain its activities are only targeting oil installations rather than the personnel or the military.

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