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Criminal Resistance? - The Politics of Kidnapping Oil Workers (Paperback)
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Criminal Resistance? - The Politics of Kidnapping Oil Workers (Paperback)
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Crude oil extraction in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria generates
96% of all foreign earnings and 85% of state revenues, making it
crucial to the survival of the Nigerian state. Several generations
of state neglect, corruption and mismanagement have ensured that
the Delta region is one of the most socio-economically and
politically deprived in the country. By the late 1990s there was a
frightening proliferation of armed gangs and insurgent groups.
Illegal oil bunkering, pipeline vandalism, disruption of oil
production activities, riots, and demonstrations intensified and in
2003, insurgents began kidnapping oil workers at a frenetic pace.
In late 2005, an uber-insurgent movement 'organization' was formed
in Nigeria. Christened the Movement for the Emancipation of the
Niger Delta (MEND), it operates as an amorphous, multifaceted
amalgam of insurgent groups with an unprecedented clinical
precision in execution of intents. By focussing on kidnappings that
are putatively connected to the struggle for emancipating the Niger
Delta, Oriola makes the case for analysing MEND as a social
movement organization, rather than a terrorist or criminal gang by
showing how political processes shape kidnappings in the Delta. The
use of violent repertoires of contention has not garnered
sufficient attention in the social movement literature, despite the
fact that that around the world, many similar groups are adopting
violent tactics without necessarily eschewing non-violent
techniques. Based on multi-actor research, including interviews and
focus group discussions with community members, military
authorities, 42 ex-insurgents directly involved in illegal oil
bunkering and kidnapping, and official email statements from 'Jomo
Gbomo', the spokesperson of MEND, this book will be of interest to
sociologists, political scientists and peace and security studies
scholars.
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