Nigeria has resumed the payment of allowances to former Niger Delta
rebels under an amnesty scheme, a spokesman said Wednesday, after low
global crude prices plunged the oil-rich country into a financial
crisis.
"The payment of allowances is ongoing. Before now, there were some logistics issues, which we have addressed," programme spokesman Owei Lakemfa told AFP.
"But additional money has now been provided and the beneficiaries are getting their stipends through the central bank," he said.
The
amnesty scheme was introduced in 2009 after years of violence,
including kidnappings and attacks on oil and gas installations, by
militants demanding a fairer share of revenues for local people.
Despite
the billions of dollars generated since the discovery of crude in
Nigeria in the 1950s, most people live in dire poverty around the creeks
and rivers of the oil-producing southern delta region.
But the scheme's future had faced uncertainty since President Muhammadu Buhari took office in May 2015, with indications it would gradually be wound down.
Nigeria's
economy has been hit badly by the global fall in oil prices since
mid-2014, which has reduced government revenues and forced up inflation
to an 11-year high.
- Social integration -
Under the scheme, a repentant militant receives 65,000 naira ($204) a month in exchange for renouncing violence.
About 30,000
ex-militants have joined the amnesty scheme, which the government
initially planned to wind up by 2018, Lakemfa said.
"The decision to exit the scheme lies with the president," he added.
Some
people on the amnesty scheme, particularly those studying abroad on
government scholarships, have complained about not receiving their
monthly stipends.
But Lakemfa said that ex-militants studying abroad had also been catered for. "There is no problem at all with those on overseas training, as their tuition and allowances are being paid promptly," he said.
Officials
say between 15,000 and 20,000 former militants are this year expected
to end amnesty-funded vocational skills and academic programmes designed
to integrate them back into society.
Nigeria has seen a resurgence in oil unrest since the beginning of the year.
Since
February, militant group the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) has carried out
devastating attacks on the country's key oil infrastructure, slashing
output to around a third.
Pipelines operated by
oil majors like Anglo-Dutch group Shell, US' Chevron and Exxon and
Italy's Eni, as well as the state-run Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, have been targeted.
The NDA has
spurned a government truce until its demands for a fairer share of the
nation's oil wealth for the Niger delta residents, as well as
self-determination and political autonomy, are realised.
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