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Page last updated at 15:26 GMT, Friday, 17 July 2009 16:26 UK

Nigeria 'ready for 10,000 rebels'

Oil militant
Militant attacks have sharply cut Nigeria's oil production

Some 10,000 militants could benefit from an amnesty in Nigeria's oil-producing Niger Delta region, a military official has said.

Air-Vice Marshal Lucky Ararile said militants who disarmed would be paid a monthly allowance while being reintegrated into civilian life.

However correspondents are sceptical about the figures, saying there are hundreds, not thousands, of fighters.

The main militant group has called a 60-day halt to attacks in the Delta.

This followed the release of militant leader Henry Okah on Monday, as part of the amnesty.

The unrest in the Delta has caused a sharp drop in Nigeria's oil production in recent years.

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AVM Ararile said the militants were based at up to 60 camps around the Delta.

He said the authorities were setting up 27 collection and reintegration centres for the disarming fighters, mostly in Rivers, Delta and Bayelsa states where the violence has been worst.

The disarming militants would be paid 20,000 naira ($135) per month while in the centres, along with 1,500 naira a day for food, he said.

After a major military offensive in May, President Umara Yar'Adua proposed the amnesty, in an offer which lasts until October.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) says it is fighting so local people benefit more from their region's oil.

But its campaign has been tainted by violent kidnappings of civilians and the theft of oil.



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