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Charred bodies in Awori
area, Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway in Abule Egba, Lagos by
fire as a result of pipeline on Tuesday December 26, 2006 |
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Burnt human bodies being loaded into a truck with shovels
at the scene of the explosion
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Victims in area hospital beds, Lagos, Nigeria
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This year’s Christmas celebration
turned out rather too painful for some residents of Lagos
State, when fire from a pipeline explosion claimed estimated
thousands of people and injured hundreds of others.
Although the Nigerian Red Cross Society and Reuters put the
death toll between 500 and 700, residents put the casualties
in the thousands.
The victims had largely gone to the leaking pipelines to draw
fuel following scarcity of gasoline in Nigeria during the Christmas
season.
Fuel scarcity had made movement almost impossible in Nigeria
during the Christmas period, therefore news of fuel availability
anywhere around Lagos metropolitan area normally attracts huge
crowd.
Apparently, news of leaking fuel from oil pipelines was no
exception despite the clearly known dangers.
Nigeria is one of the major suppliers of petroleum products
to the world, yet thousands of Nigerian citizens are often
roasted to death when fuel scarcity and poverty force the population
to resort to stealing fuel from the pipelines.
According to news reports, “the high-level syndicates
do arrive at the specific pipeline location with sophisticated
equipments with which they drilled the pipeline, lift (draw)
petroleum products and depart with many tankers numbering between
20 to 40 filled with petrol”.
A tanker load is estimated to fetch between N10million to
N20million depending on where the fuel is sold, albeit, in
the thriving local and international black market.
More troublesome are recent news reports that top officials
of the government, security agencies and government corporations
may have been involved in the pipeline vandalization that caused
these explosions.
More troublesome also are news reports that a large convoy
of heavily armed policemen and the military, sometimes numbering
50 to 100 lead these operations.
More troublesome also are further reports that the syndicate
have their people in the NNPC who switch off electronic gadgets
that normally monitors the pipeline which allows the syndicate
to drill the pipes at the most vulnerable spots.
When the big syndicates leave, it was then that less sophisticated
criminals, ordinary people, unemployed youths male and female,
poor and hungry neighborhood folks, men, women, adult, teenagers,
children, street urchins take over the scene to scoop petrol
out of the leaking pipes, while local security details in the
area will be readily available extorting/collecting bribes
from those scooping the leaking fuel. The crowd is normally
huge.
The local participants scoops petrol with open containers
such as buckets, cans, tins, jerry-cans, with and without covers
and whatever container they have.
When the words normally get out, bigger individual criminals
with tankers, including water tankers, vehicles including private
and commercial, company vehicles and passenger buses filled
with containers, working class motorists from nearby and far
places will start trooping in to scoop fuel.
The criminals and street urchins would sell the fuel in the
open black market, while the working class motorists and private
car owners will keep the fuel in their houses for private use.
Once the word gets out about location of leaking fuel pipeline,
both the high and low, big and small in the society throng
to the location to scoop fuel.
Due to scarcity of fuel in Nigeria,
this is good deal for fuel–starved population. It is,
most importantly, a good business for most of the participants.
The public, the motorists have no choice than to buy petrol
from the black market.
The fire, which quickly spread may
have killed both participants in illegal fuel procurement,
innocent passersby’s and
residents in the neighborhood minding their businesses.
Debunking claims by NNPC (a federal
government agency controlling the production and distribution
of petroleum in Nigeria) that street urchins were responsible
for fuel pipeline vandalization, a petroleum engineer based
in Lagos, anonymously said: “there
is no way a commoner like area boys would have drilled
a high pressured petrol pipeline without getting incinerated
doing it on the spot. It takes knowledgeable experts to drill
high pressure pipelines; this is certainly an inside job”.
The fact that despite millions of dollars spent on providing
helicopters and high-level equipments to monitor pipelines,
and vandalization have continued unchecked goes to question
NNPC claims that those are the handiwork of common criminals
and ordinary citizens.
Despite the fact that pipeline explosion is not new to Nigeria,
it is unknown whether the government had put any form of emergency
response protocol in place to deal with future occurrence.
The NNPC is one of the government agencies under direct control
of President Obasanjo and also one of the agencies adjudged
most corrupt in Nigeria today.
This is not only a national tragedy; it is a colossal national
shame and disgrace.
This represents total failure of leadership at all levels.
The leadership has to be held accountable for this calamity.
SOME NOTABLE NIGERIA PIPELINE DISASTERS |
May 2006: |
At least 150 killed in Lagos |
Dec 2004: |
At least 20 killed in Lagos |
Sept 2004: |
At least 60 killed in Lagos |
June 2003: |
At least 105 killed in Abia State |
July 2000: |
At least 300 killed in Warri |
Mar 2000: |
At least 50 killed in Abia State |
Oct 1998: |
At least 1,000 killed in Jesse |
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