In a statement, the Niger Delta Greenland Justice Mandate group yesterday said it would not support the talks being held by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and representatives from the Niger Delta to end the oil infrastructure sabotage.
Attacks on pipelines by militant groups have slashed Nigeria's oil production helping to tip the country into recession as it struggles to adapt to the low price of crude globally.
"...In furtherance of the Operation Hammurabi Code, our Akuma strike team struck and brought down the 32-inch Effurun-Otor delivery line," the militant group's spokesman Aldo Agbalaja in a statement.
The Effurun-Otor pipeline feeds the Utorogu gas plant that powers Lagos, a megacity of around 20 million people.
The militants dismissed the forthcoming talks in Nigeria's capital Abuja on Tuesday, saying they would "never get our support."
"Like we said before now, the Niger Delta Greenland Justice Mandate is not opposed to a genuine dialogue between the federal government and real representatives of the various nations of our region," said the statement.
"We are collecting names from the nations in the region, those who will sincerely and equitably represent our various peoples."
Divisions between rival militant groups will make it hard for the Nigerian government to strike a lasting peace deal.
A 2009 amnesty deal with militants helped end sabotage in the oil-producing southern swamplands, but the violence reignited after Buhari's cash-strapped government temporarily ended amnesty payments and arrested a prominent ex-militant for corruption.
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