Outrage over fuel prices in Nigeria
02:01 - Source: CNN

Are you protesting fuel prices in Nigeria? Send CNN iReport your stories, videos

Story highlights

The oil union says it is suspending the strike to allow protesters to stock up on food

An oil industry union gave the government an ultimatum to restore fuel subsidies

Talks between the government and unions resume Saturday

Sectarian violence also plagues the oil-rich but largely impoverished nation

Lagos, Nigeria CNN  — 

Nigerian unions resumed talks with the government Saturday following days of national protests over corruption and soaring fuel prices in Africa’s largest oil producer.

Throngs of protesters took to the streets, demanding government accountability and a return of fuel subsidies ended on January 1, a move that doubled gas prices and sent the cost of other goods skyrocketing.

A union official urged demonstrators to take a break Saturday and Sunday, and he said stores will reopen to allow them to get supplies.

The weekend suspension follows reports that protesters are running out of basic necessities, said Folorunso Oginni, chairman of the nation’s oil union, the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria.

Despite the strike suspension, the deadline to shut down oil production is still in effect unless the government and labor unions reach an agreement, he said.

Nigeria map

In solidarity with protesters, the petroleum association has threatened to stop production if the government does not reinstate the subsidies and return the cost of fuel to previous levels.

A decision to halt production would affect global oil prices; Nigeria is the world’s eighth-largest exporter.

Labor unions and the government negotiated until late Thursday without an agreement to restore fuel subsidies. Talks are expected to resume Saturday, a union official said.

The protests – dubbed “Occupy Nigeria” – have galvanized the continent’s most populous nation.

The protests – dubbed “Occupy Nigeria” – have galvanized the continent’s most populous nation.

“People of all walks are coming out to protest,” said Olumide Adeleye, a Lagos entrepreneur. “There are young people and old people. People parking their Mercedes-Benzes and Land Rovers. People walking barefoot.”

The government has said the removal will free funds to improve the country’s infrastructure.

But there is a widespread lack of trust in the government to provide the infrastructure – Nigeria is regularly ranked among the most corrupt countries in the world.

“It is to now to try to move this forward regain the people’s trust. They cannot say because of mistakes in the past the country should not move forward,” the finance minister said Friday.

In addition to the protests, the government faces another crisis – religious attacks that have heightened fears of sectarian violence in parts of the country.

Continued anti-Christian violence in the north and a long-simmering separatist movement have erupted recently.

More than 30 Christians died in recent violence in Adamawa state, prompting a 24-hour curfew in that northwestern Nigerian state to guard against reprisals, a government chaplain said Saturday.

Boko Haram, a militant Islamic group that is said to favor strict Sharia law, is frequently blamed for the sectarian violence.

Rumors have swirled in recent days that Muslims in the largely Christian and animist south are also becoming the targets of attacks, the Red Cross said. A mosque in southern Edo state was burned and another vandalized during recent clashes in Benin City.

The rising tide of violence led the president to declare a partial state of emergency in four northern states two weeks ago.

CNN’s Vladimir Duthiers and Kim Chakanetsa contributed to this report.