Hundreds of Nigerian protesters stormed a crude oil flow station owned by Shell in the restive Niger Delta on Aug. 11 demanding jobs and infrastructure development.
The protesters complained they were not benefiting from oil production in their area, a common refrain in the impoverished swampland that produces most of Nigeria's oil. They also demanded an end to oil pollution in the area.
Soldiers and security guards did not disperse the crowd as it entered the Belema Flow Station in Rivers State, which feeds oil into Shell's Bonny export terminal.
However, the army sent reinforcements after protesters said they would stay at the facility for two weeks.
"I am a graduate for about eight years without a job," said Anthony Bouye, one of the protest leaders. "Shell won't employ me despite us having so much wealth in our backyard."
Shell had no immediate comment. It was not immediately clear whether there was any impact on oil production.
While Bonny Light crude oil is currently under force majeure due to the closure of the Trans Niger pipeline, exports have continued using a second pipeline, the Nembe Creek Trunk Link.
Militant attacks on oil facilities have largely stopped since the government started talks in 2016 with community leaders to address grievances of poverty and lack of development in the neglected region.
Despite that, protests flare as locals complain they do not benefit from the energy wealth, which is the dominant source of Nigerian government revenue.
Oil exports were scheduled to hit a 17-month high in August, but fell back under 2 million barrels per day (MMbbl/d) after Shell declared force majeure on Bonny Light.
Nigerian oil production fell to just over 1 MMbbl/d at certain points in 2016, but has recovered thanks to a steady decline in the number of attacks on pipelines.
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