Lagos, Nigeria (CNN)Nigeria
is Africa's largest oil producer, but fuel shortages have paralyzed the
country that just a year ago was declared Africa's largest economy.
At
one gas station in Lagos, crowds push at the gates waving empty jerry
cans. Cars queue for a kilometre down the road creating gridlock.
Similar scenes are being repeated at almost every petrol station across Nigeria.
"I've
been here since 4 a.m. It's not good," says local resident Abdulsalam
Mohammed as he finally drives his car to the petrol pump. "Now it's
almost 3 p.m. Nobody can work today."
"We
are an oil producing country, very rich, a giant in Africa," says Seun
Olewale, another driver who is carrying empty fuel cans. "But the
experience we are getting now is so hard."
The
shortages have been going on since March despite the fact that,
according to the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Nigeria
produces about 2.5 million barrels of crude oil per day.
The
problem is Nigeria does not have the capacity to refine enough of its
own oil into fuel to meet the needs of its population of 150,177 million
people.
Fuel in Nigeria is used not
just to run cars and transport for goods and services, but also to power
generators for homes and businesses; most Nigerians get only a few
hours of electricity a day.
The
companies that import fuel claim they have not been paid by the Nigerian
government -- and so they cut off the supply. As a result, Africa's
largest economy has ground to a halt.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria's finance minister, told CNN's John Defterios the situation was complex.
"You
have to verify the claims of the marketers before they are paid, and
because the government is coming to an end, they are getting quite
nervous," she said.
"They are pushing
very hard and they are using this shortage as an instrument to try to
get the existing government to pay them quickly, without going through
the thorough verification, and we are not going to do that."
Nigerians are no strangers to fuel shortages -- the country was subject to similar shortfalls in 2012.
The
obvious solution would be to simply pay the fuel importers, but the
Nigerian government subsidizes the country's fuel prices, and with oil
prices falling, it needs to save money.
And
that, says Seun with his two jerry cans, is the real problem. He says
the government's policies are hurting Nigeria's economy, and hurting
ordinary Nigerians even more.
"This is a war on the poor," he insists.
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