Oil exploration to start in Borno, says VP Sambo
Nigeria’s
Vice President Namadi Sambo said Saturday that prospects for the
improvement of the welfare of Nigerians living in Borno state, the
epicentre of Boko Haram insurgency, are bright, with the discovery of
oil in the area and the plan to begin exploration soon.
“I am
happy to inform you that three oil blocks have been identified and I
believe that by the end of this year or first quarter of next year,
there is going to be oil exploration in Borno.”
Sambo spoke during
a visit to Maiduguri and also announced government’s readiness to
observe the ceasefire declared by Boko Haram.
“we welcome the
ceasefire offer announced recently by the Boko Haram group and we will
do everything as a government to see that we achieve a lasting peace in
Nigeria,” he said.
Since 2009, violence linked to Boko Haram’s insurgency has claimed some 3,000 lives, including killings by the security forces.
A recent ceasefire proposal, made by a man claiming to represent Boko Haram, received a lukewarm reception in Nigeria.
Although
the army welcomed the offer by Sheikh Muhammed Abdulazeez Ibn Idriss,
he may be an impostor, and violence has not ended since his
announcement.
On Friday, the Nigerian army also declared that it
had killed 17 Islamists in raids that destroyed two Boko Haram camps in
the state of Borno, where Maiduguri is the capital.
Nigerian
President Goodluck Jonathan has been criticised for not visiting Borno,
one of the main targets of Boko Haram attacks, since he took office in
May 2010.
Sambo’s stay is also the first official visit by a vice president since the rebel group resumed its insurgency in 2009.
Nigeria
is Africa’s largest country with a population of more than 160 million.
It is also the continent’s top oil producer. The country is roughly
divided between a mainly Muslim north and predominately Christian south.
Nigeria’s
riches are mainly concentrated in the southern Niger Delta, where the
oil is produced, and in Lagos, the country’s economic capital. The rise
of Islamist extremism is widely blamed on poverty in the north.
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