Gunmen attacked a vessel off the coast of oil-rich Bayelsa State,
kidnapping six foreigners, a police official said Wednesday.
Three Ukrainians, two Indians and a Russian were taken from a
vessel run by energy company Century Group 70 kilometers (43 miles) off
Nigeria's southern coast on Sunday, Bayelsa police spokesman Fidelis Odunna
said. According to the Associated Press (AP), the kidnappers have demanded a
200 million naira ($1.27 million) ransom.
Typically, foreign companies operating in Nigeria's Niger Delta
pay cash ransoms to free their employees after negotiating down kidnappers'
demands. Foreign hostages can fetch several millions of naira apiece.
Foreign companies have pumped oil out of the Niger Delta, a region
of mangroves and swamps the size of Portugal, for more than 50 years. Despite
the billions of dollars flowing into Nigeria's government, many in the delta
remain desperately poor, living in polluted waters without access to proper medical
care, education or work. The poor conditions sparked an uprising in 2006 by
militants and opportunistic criminals who blew up oil pipelines and kidnapped
foreign workers.
That violence ebbed in 2009 with a government-sponsored amnesty
program that offered ex-fighters monthly payments and job training. However,
few in the delta have seen the promised benefits and sporadic kidnappings and
attacks continue.
Pirate attacks are on the rise in West Africa's Gulf of Guinea,
which follows the continent's southward curve from Liberia to Gabon. Over the
last year and a half, piracy there has escalated from low-level armed robberies
to hijackings and cargo thefts. Last year, London-based Lloyd's Market
Association – an umbrella group of insurers – listed Nigeria, neighboring Benin
and nearby waters in the same risk category as Somalia, where two decades of
war and anarchy have allowed piracy to flourish.
Experts say many of the pirates in the area come from Nigeria,
where corrupt law enforcement allows criminality to thrive and there's a
bustling black market for stolen crude oil. Nigeria's lawless waters and often
violent oil region routinely see foreigners kidnapped for ransom. Increasingly,
criminal gangs also have targeted middle- and upper-class Nigerians as well.
Sunday's kidnapping is just the latest attack in the region. On
Dec. 17, gunmen kidnapped five Indian sailors on the SP Brussels tanker as it
sat about 40 miles (64 kilometers) off the coast of the Niger Delta. That came
the same day gunmen abducted four South Koreans and a Nigerian working for
Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. at a construction site in the Brass area of
Bayelsa state. Those workers were later released, though the Indians are still
believed to be held by the abductors.
Source: Compass
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