Of Oil wells, Greed: Nigeria in a Bubble of Self-Denial
By Linus Obogo
In the curious theatre of Nigeria’s federal drama, few paradoxes are as tragic or as telling as the insistence that Cross River State is a non-littoral abstraction, a landlocked spectator to a coastline history itself refuses to forget. This national fiction, repeated often enough to sound like doctrine, has calcified into policy. And in that calcification lies a slow hemorrhage, of truth, of equity, and perhaps, of oil wells drifting ever closer to diplomatic ambiguity.
The story cannot be told without revisiting the fateful ruling of the International Court of Justice in 2002, which ceded the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon. In the wake of that judgment, Nigeria complied with solemn grace. Yet, somewhere between legal obedience and political convenience, a dangerous oversimplification was born: that Cross River, having lost Bakassi, lost its littoral soul. That it ceased to touch the Atlantic. That its maritime identity evaporated like mist at dawn.
But geography is not so easily erased by administrative pen strokes. The Atlantic does not consult political expediency before it kisses the Nigerian coast. Estuaries remain estuaries. Continental shelves do not shrink because a narrative requires them to. To insist otherwise is to dwell in a national bubble, a self-crafted illusion that blurs law, science and common sense.
Meanwhile, Akwa Ibom State luxuriates in the bounty of derivation, feeding fat on oil wells whose coordinates tell a more complex story than official gazettes admit. It is not a sin for a state to prosper; indeed, prosperity is the aim of federations. But when prosperity is secured by the narrowing of another’s rightful claim, when revenue flows like a monsoon to one corridor while another stands parched by technicality, then avarice ceases to be a private vice and becomes a structural injustice.
Nigeria, in its curious self-denial, appears content to perpetuate this imbalance. By maintaining the fiction that Cross River is non-littoral, the federation not only diminishes a constituent state; it undermines its own strategic posture. Maritime identity confers more than derivation funds. It defines territorial waters, influences boundary negotiations and strengthens claims in offshore resource disputes. To erase Cross River from that map is to weaken Nigeria’s maritime coherence at a time when coherence is currency.
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The greater irony is this: in denying Cross River’s littoral character, Nigeria may inadvertently loosen its grip on offshore assets in contested spaces. Boundaries, after all, are not sustained by rhetoric but by consistent legal and cartographic assertions. When a nation appears uncertain about its own coastal configuration, it invites scrutiny — and perhaps opportunism — from neighbors eager to press advantage. The risk is not theoretical. Oil wells do not exist in metaphors; they sit in coordinates, vulnerable to contestation where ambiguity thrives.
What, then, explains this persistent bubble of denial? Perhaps it is administrative inertia, the reluctance to revisit old assumptions for fear of unsettling established revenue streams. Perhaps it is political calculus, the dread of reallocating derivation funds in a federation where fiscal adjustments can ignite tempers. Or perhaps it is simpler still: a preference for comfortable myths over inconvenient truths.
Yet the cost of myth is mounting. Cross River’s economic aspirations are tethered to recognition of its maritime reality. Deprived of that recognition, it is consigned to a fiscal straightjacket, its developmental momentum restrained not by lack of vision but by denial of status. And Nigeria, by extension, sacrifices the robustness that comes from equity among its federating units.
This is not a call for fratricidal rivalry. It is a plea for intellectual honesty. The Atlantic coastline is not a partisan trophy; it is a national asset. If Cross River retains estuarine frontage and maritime adjacency , as hydrographic evidence suggests — then policy must align with geography. Anything less is governance by convenience.
For Nigeria to thrive in an era of shifting maritime claims and intensifying offshore exploration, it must anchor its assertions in clarity. It cannot afford to project confusion about which of its states are coastal. The world of international arbitration is unforgiving to nations that equivocate about their own maps.
Akwa Ibom’s prosperity need not be diminished for Cross River’s rights to be affirmed. A federation strong enough to share power should be strong enough to share truth. Derivation formulas can be recalibrated; budgets can be renegotiated. What cannot be easily restored, once lost, is territorial credibility.
In the end, the question is not merely about oil wells or monthly allocations. It is about whether Nigeria chooses realism over rhetoric. Whether it steps out of its self-fashioned bubble and confronts the cartographic facts with courage. Whether it recognizes that justice among states is not an act of charity but of national preservation.
For as long as Cross River’s littoral claim is dismissed, Nigeria risks more than internal discord. It risks external vulnerability. And in a world where maritime boundaries determine billions in resources, such vulnerability is a luxury no nation can afford.
History will judge whether this era clings to comfortable fictions or embraces corrective truth. But the tide, indifferent to politics, continues its ancient rhythm along the coast, a silent reminder that geography, unlike policy, does not lie.
Obogo is Chief Press Secretary and Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Governor Bassey Otu
