The
strike, which enters its third day today, shut down banks, businesses
and ports across the West African nation, limited the trade in the naira
and helped push up cocoa prices. While the action hasn’t slowed oil
exports from Africa’s top crude producer, government troops guarded oil
company offices and facilities in Port Harcourt and military helicopters
and boats patrolled the Niger River delta.
Jonathan,
who won a four-year term in April, has pledged to use savings from the
1.2 trillion naira ($7.4 billion) subsidy to invest in power plants and
roads in sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest economy. He’s also vowed to
curb wages and create a sovereign wealth fund.
“Any
backing away from the issue now will raise quite profound credibility
issues with the government,” Antony Goldman, the head of London-based PM
Consulting, which specializes in risk analysis in West Africa, said in a
phone interview yesterday. “By contrast if they get this through, maybe
people will start believing the transformational agenda is something
more that just rhetoric.”
Thousands
of protesters marched yesterday for a second day through the streets of
major cities, led by union leaders, displaying banners and signs
denouncing Jonathan’s government and demanding the reversal of
fuel-price increases. In the southern city of Warri, a key base of oil
companies, protesters blocked off the road access to its port for hours.
Population Skeptical
“The
initial protests and strikes are not surprising as many Nigerians feel
the subsidy is the only benefit they get from the country’s oil wealth
and are skeptical about how the government will spend the money saved by
ending the subsidy,” Fitch Ratings said yesterday in an e-mailed
statement.
Jonathan
may decide to try to start negotiations to remove the subsidy gradually
when the Cabinet meets tomorrow, Babatunde Obaniyi, head of market risk
at Lagos-based Greenwich Trust Group Ltd., said in a phone interview
yesterday.
While
Labor Minister Emeka Wogu told reporters in Abuja, the capital, that
“the option of dialog is still open,” Goldman doesn’t see much scope for
compromise.
“I don’t know how much middle ground there is when neither side really wants to look like they’re making concessions,” he said.
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