President Muhammadu Buhari has urged community leaders from the Niger Delta to pacify people in the restive southern region, which has been hit by a series of attacks on oil and gas facilities in the last few months.
Militants,
whose attacks pushed oil production to 30-year lows in recent weeks,
have called for a greater share of the country's oil wealth to be passed
on to the region's communities and for authorities to clean up areas
blighted by oil spills.
"When you get together with other leaders, please pacify the people,"
Buhari told a delegation of community leaders at his residence in the
capital, Abuja, on Thursday, June 30, adding that he wanted "as much intelligence as possible on the situation in the Niger Delta".
"We intend to rebuild this country," said Buhari. "A lot of damage has been done, so I want you to tell the people to be patient."
Comments
made to the group during the meeting, which lasted around an hour, were
detailed in an emailed statement issued by the presidency titled "We'll
rebuild the Niger Delta".
Earlier this month it
was announced that the government's military campaign in the Delta would
be scaled down, after having been built up a few weeks earlier, to
pursue talks with militants.
Last week petroleum
ministry sources said a month-long truce had been agreed with militants
but the Niger Delta Avengers, who have claimed responsibility for most
attacks, later said they did not "remember" agreeing to a ceasefire.
However, the Avengers have not carried out an attack since June 16.
Following Thursday's meeting, Buhari's spokesman Femi Adesina said an amnesty agreed in 2009 to end a previous insurgency was "being studied with a view to determining what had been fulfilled".
If there were any outstanding issues, these would be addressed, he said.
The
president angered former militants earlier this year when he cut the
budget assigned to the amnesty programme, which offered militants cash
and job training in exchange for stopping attacks, by two-thirds.
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