By Chinedu Asadu, ABUJA,
Nigeria
An explosion and fire at an illegal oil refinery site in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region killed at least 15 people, including a pregnant woman, residents and a local environmental rights group reported Tuesday.
GRAPHIC Content - Courtesy |
The blast happened Monday in
the southern River state’s Emohua district, where illegal refineries are common. Residents said the
death toll was likely to grow because many of the bodies were completely burned
and dozens of people were injured.
Police confirmed the incident
but did not provide details of what happened. Locals said most of the people
who died had worked at the illegal refinery in the village of Rumucholu.
The workers at the site were
refining oil taken from a vandalized pipe, according to Chima Avadi, a local
activist. “When they scoop from the point where they vandalized the pipe, they
will take to where they were cooking. That is how fire got there,” Avadi said.
Dozens of people were being treated in
hospitals, he said. A pregnant woman was among the 15 victims confirmed dead,
according to a statement issued by the Youths and Environmental Advocacy
Centre, a local environmental rights group.
Explosions
at locally run refineries are common in oil-rich but impoverished Niger Delta
region, where where most of the nation’s oil facilities are targeted by chronic oil theft.
Shady operators often avoid
regulators by setting up refineries in remote areas. The workers at such
facilities rarely adhere to safety standards, leading to frequent fires,
including one in Imo state last year that killed more than 100 people were killed.
“The money they make from
there in one or two days is more than what a civil servant can make in a year,”
Youths and Environmental Advocacy Centre Executive director Fyneface Dumnamene
said.
His group has been advocating
for environmental reforms and an end to the illegal activities. But amid growing economic hardship in Nigeria, “people are
looking for opportunities to make ends meet,” Dumnamene said.
Nigeria lost at least $3
billion worth of crude oil to theft between January 2021 and February 2022, the
Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission said last year.
As one of Africa’s top oil
producers, Nigeria gets most of its wealth from the Niger Delta region.
However, residents say their communities lack basic amenities and they feel
abandoned by the government.
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