Women victorious in Nigeria oil terminal
takeover
By D'ARCY DORAN
Associated Press Writer
ESCRAVOS, Nigeria (AP) -- Hundreds of women
carrying straw mats and thermoses abandoned
ChevronTexaco's main oil terminal, ending a peaceful
10-day protest that crippled the oil giant's Nigeria
operations and won an unprecedented company pledge to
build modern towns out of poor villages.
"I give one piece of advice to all women in all
countries: they shouldn't let any company cheat them,"
said Anunu Uwawah, a leader of the protest at the
southeastern Nigerian Escravos terminal.
Uwawah and her comrades were ferried back to their
villages in ChevronTexaco boats on Thursday evening,
along the way passing hundreds of oil workers
returning to the facility.
The last of the protesters were expected to leave
Friday, said company spokesman Wole Agunbiade.
He said operations were quickly returning to normal
at the company's southeastern Escravos terminal, which
accounts for close to half a million barrels a day,
the bulk of the company's Nigeria exports.
"Chevron has shown a lot of restraint, commitment
to good neighborliness, peace and dialogue," Agunbiade
said. "I would like to believe this is the hallmark of
Chevron negotiations, and will continue to be."
The women had trapped about 700 American, British,
Canadian and Nigerian workers inside the terminal. Two
hundred employees were allowed to leave Sunday and
hundreds more two days later, leaving just a few dozen
inside.
The women kept their hold on the terminal by
threatening to take off their clothes -- a powerful
traditional shaming gesture -- in a last-ditch gesture
to humiliate the company.
The peaceful, all-woman protest was a departure for
the oil-rich Niger Delta, where armed men frequently
use kidnapping and sabotage to pressure oil
multinationals into giving them jobs, protection,
money or compensation for alleged environmental
damage. Hostages generally are released unharmed.
The success of the Escravos occupation appeared to
have inspired copycat protests by women from a rival
tribe who captured several smaller oil facilities
earlier in the week.
Agunbiade, spokesman for the company's Nigeria
subsidiary, said Thursday officials would soon begin
talks with hundreds of women who still held four
pipeline flowstations. The women's representatives
said they were in control of five facilities, although
Agunbiade could not confirm the fifth.
The Escravos terminal raid was launched by women
from six surrounding communities who said they were
trying to draw attention to the grinding poverty in
their villages. The Niger Delta is one of the poorest
places in Nigeria despite its oil wealth. Nigeria is
the world's sixth-largest exporter of oil and the
fifth-largest supplier to the United States.
For the women, what started out as an act of
desperation became a method to victory.
After days of negotiations, company executives
agreed to build schools, clinics, town halls,
electricity and water systems in villages of rusty tin
shacks. The company also agreed to give jobs to at
least 25 residents and help build fish and chicken
farms.
The women's tactics impressed Frank Eyeoyibo, a
32-year-old unemployed man who took part in a protest
against the company last year. That action by village
men ended with police and soldiers firing tear gas,
while some men were beaten with canes and whips,
Eyeoyibo said.
"This (women's protest) has broken through," said
Eyeoyibo, whose mother was among the female
protesters. "The women took Chevron by surprise and
they couldn't believe it."
The protesters ranging in age from 30 to 90 were
led by a core of wives and mothers in their mid-50s
and 60s, whom villagers affectionately referred to as
the "mamas."
The women said they launched their protest after
sending a list of demands to ChevronTexaco that went
unanswered for three weeks.
The takeover began on July 8 when 100 women stormed
a company ferry, grabbed the radio and ordered the
driver to take the boat to take them to the terminal,
Uwawah said.
The women spread out across the massive concrete
and steel complex and blocked the docks, the airfield,
the gas plant and the tank farm.
For the villagers, it seemed natural to take their
protest to the oil company next door, instead of
Nigeria's government in the capital, Abuja, a place
they have never seen 400 kilometers (250 miles) away.
After decades of brutal and corrupt military rule,
politicians elected in 1999 elections have done little
to alleviate the stark poverty of the Niger Delta.
Village values and corporate realities clashed
during days of heated negotiations as the women
demanded lifelong employment promises while oil
executives insisted on shorter-term commitments.
ChevronTexaco's top negotiator, Canadian executive
Dick Filgate, conceded the protest was a wake-up call.
"In the past we basically dealt with things issue
to issue, which basically meant paying money (to
villagers). It's an easy solution, but after paying
the money there is nothing to show for it," Filgate
said Monday. "We now have a different philosophy and
that is to do more with communities."
― Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 24 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
one year passes...