The Nigerian air force has decided to sell its older MiG 15       and 21, Jaguar and G222 aircraft and replace them with more modern       multi-purpose warplanes. 
              August 17; Civil unrest has forced Texaco to halt        production in its Nigerian oil fields The lost production amounts to 1.3        million dollars of oil sales per day. Total Nigerian daily production is        about 36 million dollars a day. The new civilian government plans to        reduce the size of its military from 80,000 to 50,000 men..
       August 15; Ijaw militants in oil rich Ondo state        attacked soldiers guarding an oil installation .One person was killed and        several wounded. Some 200 people have died here in ethnic fighting during        the last two weeks. Recently arrived government troops have imposed a dusk        to dawn curfew.
       August 12; The government played down, but did not deny        reports that last week troops killed some 300 civilians in northeast        Nigeria. Apparently a force of 20 police, 20 soliders and 60 civilian        volunteers went in to pacify the area. Leaders of the various ethnic        groups in Ondo state agreed to allow the army to enter and keep the peace.        Civil disorder in Nigeria's coastal oil provinces has cost the country a        billion dollars in lost production last year. The local people have gotten        little to show for all the oil pumped out of their neighborhoods. There        has been a lot of pollution because of the oil drilling, and few of the        locals have gotten jobs or any economic benefit out of it. As a result,        the last few years have seen more and more demonstrations and violence        against the oil operations. The oil companies have been more helpful in        dealing with the problem than the government, and because of that the        disorder continues..
       August 11; Local newspapers reported that last week        troops killed some 300 civilians while putting down unrest in a remote        area of northeast Nigeria.
       August 10; Fighting between Ilajes and Ijaws in Ondo        state continues, and gets worse.
       August 9; Fighting between Ilajes and Ijaws in Ondo        state has flared up again over the last few days, leaving several dead.        Army reconnaissance troops of the 2nd Mechanized division have        arrived to get a better idea of just what the situation is. Officials of        the newly elected Nigerian government are claiming that the ethnic unrest        currently plaguing the country is being instigated by enemies of the new        government. No proof was provided.
       August 8; The new government has discovered that the        military officers who recently left office had looted the treasury. The        theft could be as high as 400 million dollars. This will make it more        difficult for the new government to keep the peace, as money is often the        cure for civil unrest.
       August 3; For the last several days, fighting between        Ilajes and Ijaws in the towns of Oroto and Apaja have killed as many as        fifty people. The fighting sometimes involves who will obtain what        benefits from the local oil production. About 700 of the 3,000 Nigerians        living in Sierra Leone are being evacuated because their homes and        livelihoods were destroyed in the civil war.
       July 29; Refugees who fled ethnic fighting in Kano have        begun to return home. 
       July 28; Ethnic fighting broke out in eastern Nigeria        (the Aguleri-Umuleri region). The majority population in the area is Ibo.        The death toll is high, with 50-100 dead. 
       July 27; More violence in Kano, about 80 have died,        mainly Christian Yorubas in this mainly Moslem Hausa town. 
       July 26; Violence continues Kano, after three days of        ethnic violence. About two dozen died. 
       July 24; Ethnic violence breaks out in the northern        city of Kano, with majority Hausas attacked Yorubas. 
       July 19; Violence continues in Shagamu, with more than        66 dead. Riot police have arrived and put down most of the violence. Many        Hausas have fled the town fearing retribution from the more numerous        Yoruba. 
       July 18; The southern town of Shagamu had a major        outbreak of ethnic violence between Yorubas and Hausas