Gunmen
seized a Nigerian-owned, Panama-flagged tanker with 16 Nigerian crew off Cote
d’Ivoire's port of Abidjan as it prepared to unload 5,000 tonnes of fuel, port
officials said on Monday.
Attacks
on shipping are increasing in the Gulf of Guinea - second only to the waters
around Somalia for piracy. But the ITRI incident was only the second of its
kind in Ivorian waters, reports Reuters.
The
tanker, named the ITRI and owned by Lagos-based Brila Energy, was commandeered
on Thursday, Abidjan's port authority said in a statement.
Serge
Constant of Koda Maritime, an Ivorian firm that was managing its stopover in
Cote d’Ivoire, said there has been no contact with it since.
Constant
said the ITRI's onboard tracking system had been disabled. Abidjan port
officials said the ITRI's last known position was off the coast of neighbouring
Ghana. But Ghanaian authorities said they had been unable to locate the ITRI.
"We
now seem to be back to square one. The information is contradictory. We don't
know who's telling us the truth and who isn't," said Constant.
Piracy
subsided to a five-year low in 2012 due mainly to a drastic reduction in Somali
hijackings in the seas off the Horn of Africa. But 10 vessels with a total of
207 crew were seized in the Gulf of Guinea off West Africa last year, according
to the International Maritime Bureau.
Many of
the pirate gangs in the Gulf of Guinea are offshoots of militant groups that
once operated in Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta before they agreed an amnesty
in 2009.
Analysts
say coordinated efforts by Nigerian authorities and neighbouring countries have
forced Nigerian pirates to seek easier targets outside their home waters.
"Nigeria
and Benin have had joint actions for two years, and they have been quite
successful. We haven't seen the kinds of heavy attacks that we used to
see," said Martin Ewi, a senior researcher with South Africa's Institute
for Security Studies.
"Ivory
Coast seems to be attracting those that have been driven out."
In
October, suspected Nigerian pirates seized a Bahamas-flagged tanker carrying
more than 32,000 metric tonnes of gasoline near Abidjan's port. The 24 crew
were later freed unharmed.
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