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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Unions call oil strike


Adams Oshiomhole speaks to journalists in Lagos, Nigeria, on Sunday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Dulue Mbachu Associated Press

LAGOS, Nigeria — Unions declared the top oil multinational here, Royal Dutch/Shell, “an enemy of the Nigerian people” on Sunday and called a Nov. 16 nationwide strike that they said would target oil exports in Africa’s oil giant.

The threats in the world’s No. 7 oil exporter — the fifth largest supplier of U.S. oil imports — appeared likely to send new shocks through the global oil price market.

Unions called the Nov. 16 strike after giving President Olusegun Obasanjo until Sunday to reverse September’s 23 percent increase in fuel prices in Nigeria.

Union leaders singled out Royal Dutch/Shell Group, Nigeria’s largest petroleum producer. They said the firm planned to take the country’s white-collar oil union to court today, in an attempt to prevent it from striking.

Shell officials would not comment on the matter and government officials could not be reached.

“We have resolved to declare Shell an enemy of the Nigerian people,” Adams Oshiomhole, leader of the main Nigeria Labor Congress, told reporters.

“Shell will be treated as an enemy. We have the capacity to engage them,” Oshiomhole said.

An October general strike over the fuel price increases paralyzed business overall but left petroleum exports unaffected.

The strike helped push oil prices past the $50 a barrel mark globally.

“The last time we did not target oil exports because we expected the government to listen,” Brown Ogbeifun, president of the union for Nigeria’s white-collar oil workers, said.