Pirates kidnap six foreigners in Nigeria
2013-02-20 19:46
-
Boko Haram
A book of articles about the violent jihadist terrorist organization based in the northeast of...
Now R810.00
buy now
Lagos - Armed pirates who stormed an oil service ship off
Nigeria have kidnapped six foreigners and demanded a $1.3m ransom for their
release, the police and military told AFP on Wednesday.
"Three of those abducted are from Ukraine, two from
India, one from Russia," Bayelsa state police spokesperson Fidelis Odunna
said of the Sunday attack.
"One of the kidnappers called to demand the sum of $1.3m,
he added.
The kidnapping of foreign oil workers is common in
Nigeria's oil-rich south, with the hostages often released following a ransom
payment.
It is, however, rare for police to discuss the details of
ransom demands.
There has also been a recent series of kidnappings in
northern Nigeria claimed by an extremist Islamist group, but those are
considered a different phenomenon.
The Armada Tuah vessel operated by the Lagos-based
Century Group with a crew of 15 was attacked by gunmen 40 nautical miles off
southern Bayelsa state at about 16:00, the area's military spokesperson,
Colonel Nwachukwu Onyema told AFP.
The vessel was en route from the oil-hub of Port Harcourt
to Abo, the site of a key deepwater oil field, where Shell, Italy's Agip and
several domestic firms have operations, Onyema further said.
"Gunboats [and] troops are already on search and
rescue," he added.
The International Maritime Bureau that tracks sea attacks
world-wide has described the waters off Nigeria as an emerging piracy hub, with
many of the raids involving gunfire.
Militants in Nigeria's oil-producing Niger Delta region
carried out scores of kidnappings before a 2009 amnesty deal led to a sharp
decline in unrest, though incidents continue.
Five Indian crew members of an oil tanker who were
kidnapped in December after heavily armed pirates stormed their vessel off
Nigeria's coast were released last month.
Medallion Marine, a Mumbai-based shipping firm, said the
hostages were freed in good health, but did not disclose whether a ransom had
been paid, or whether Nigeria's security forces played any role in securing
their release.
Motive
The theft of crude is considered a key motivation for
pirates operating in the Niger Delta.
Armed gangs in the region have become notorious for
blasting into pipelines and siphoning out crude for sale on the lucrative black
market.
Oil Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke on Tuesday told an
oil industry conference in Abuja that Nigeria was seeking international help to
curb criminality in the region.
The head of Shell's Nigeria subsidiary, Mutiu Sunmonu,
told the same conference that "there is still a lot more that must be
done" to pacify the Niger Delta.
Meanwhile, in a separate abduction case, a French family
of seven kidnapped in northern Cameroon on Tuesday were believed to have been
taken across the Nigerian border, Yaounde said, suggesting the hostage-takers
may be linked to Nigeria's main Islamist insurgent group Boko Haram.
Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer and most
populous country with an estimated 160 million people, where most in the north
are Muslim while the south is predominantly Christian.