Audio By Carbonatix
Hundreds of militants in Nigeria have handed over weapons at a ceremony in the southern Delta region.
The handover in Yenagoa, west of the oil city of Port Harcourt, took place after regional rebel leaders accepted an amnesty offer from the government.
However a faction of Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend), the main rebel group, denounced the offer and said it would resume attacks.
Unrest in the region has seriously affected Nigeria's oil production.
The weaponry handed over on Saturday included hundreds of assault rifles, a number of rocket launchers, and at least 12 gunboats.
The BBC's Caroline Duffield in Yenagoa says it is unclear how many heavy weapons have been handed over, and many of those put on display appeared to be old and rusty.
The senior Mend commanders who have accepted the amnesty offer include Ebikabowei Victor Ben, also known as General Boyloaf.
"So long as the government has said they will give the people what the people want, I think we have to give peace a chance and see how soon or how real they will perform," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa radio programme.
Fighting on
Gen Boyloaf has in the past been blamed for spectacular attacks against the oil industry in Bayelsa state.
But earlier this month he met Nigerian President Umaru Yar'Adua and accepted his offer of an amnesty for Niger Delta militants.
Gen Boyloaf and other militants have been fighting for a fairer share of the region's oil wealth for local people.
Our correspondent says they have also made huge amounts of money from kidnappings and the theft of crude oil.
But some Mend factions in neighbouring states have refused to sign up to the amnesty.
One rebel group on Saturday said accused the government of "deceit" and said it would resume "ferocious attacks on the oil industry at the end of our ceasefire" on 15 September.
Militant attacks have reduced Nigeria's out to 1.3m barrels per day. Nigeria's Opec quota is 2m.
The rebels say proceeds from oil production have not benefited the region.
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
If you don’t pay, they won’t vote for you – Hopeson Adorye in vote-buying
1 minute -
Fidelity Bank partners NLA to digitise operations and strengthen lottery ecosystem
1 minute -
Mahama acts on JoyNews exposé, orders minister to investigate district assembly’s mining equipment taxation
4 minutes -
Cedi to depreciate modestly in 2026 after historic rally – EM Advisory predicts
5 minutes -
ADB holds annual Thanksgiving Service, sets tone for achieving strategic vision
10 minutes -
GN Savings and Loans licence revocation appeal: Court grants BoG leave to file written submissionsÂ
11 minutes -
EM Advisory predicts inflation will rise to 11.3% by year-end
14 minutes -
US kills two people in attack on boat in eastern Pacific, one survivor
15 minutes -
Ghana deploys AI and drones to shift mining regulation from reactive to preventive — Minerals Commission
16 minutes -
GH¢30bn Big Push Programme to strengthen Ghana’s infrastructure in 2026 – EM Advisory
20 minutes -
Services sector to drive Ghana’s baseline 4.8% growth in 2026 – EM Advisory
20 minutes -
Education Minister appeals for end to university staff strike, confirms partial payment of arrears
24 minutes -
British International Investment reinforces commitment to Ghana’s private sector with high‑level leadership visit
27 minutes -
Major General Joseph Narh Adinkrah
37 minutes -
Ghana eyes 4.8% GDP growth in 2026 amid commodity gains and fiscal discipline – EM Advisory
40 minutes
