Protesters blocked the entrance to a Chevron oil facility in Nigeria's restive Niger Delta on Wednesday, demanding jobs and housing, a protest leader said.
"Chevron has not fulfilled many of its promises," said Collins Edema, a youth and protest leader in the Ugborodo Itsekiri community in Delta state, home to Chevron's Escravos oil depot.
Edema
said the facility had been blocked and that more than 300 people,
mostly local unemployed youths, had joined the protest, but Reuters
could not confirm that figure.
He said the U.S.
oil major had previously promised to create jobs for young people from
the impoverished area and also provide new accommodation after housing
next to the depot had been "destroyed" due to Chevron's activities. He
gave no further details.
Communities in Nigeria's
southern swampland often complain about oil pollution and houses being
moved so oil drilling can take place.
"Our
protest will continue until Chevron listens to our demands. We at
Ugborodo are urging other Itsekiri communities to follow suit and shut
down Chevron activities in our communities," Edema said.
"Some members of the Ugborodo community gathered at one of the gates of our Escravos facility," the U.S. company said in a statement. "We
continue to engage with the protesters and other key community leaders
and stakeholders, including the Delta State Government, and hope for a
resolution of the situation shortly."
The
Niger Delta region has been hit by a wave of militant attacks on oil and
gas pipelines, reducing the country's crude output by 700,000 barrels a
day, according to state oil company NNPC.
The
militants say they want a greater share of Nigeria's oil wealth - which
accounts for around 70 percent of national income - to be passed on to
communities in the impoverished region and for areas blighted by oil
spills to be cleaned up.
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