Nigeria
detains three in kidnap probe
By Dave Clark
AFP
LAGOS
Petroleumworld.com 01 26 06
Nigerian agents hunting a gang which kidnapped four foreign workers
interrogated three suspects Wednesday as the country's huge oil
industry reeled from the latest bloody attack on its facilities.
The kidnap -- combined with a series of violent attacks on oil
plants over the past three weeks that has left more than 20 dead
-- has raised tensions in Africa's biggest oil producer and put
pressure on world crude prices.
A spokesman for the Delta State government confirmed that federal
officers had detained three men in the Niger Delta and brought
them to the state capital Asaba to be questioned about the fate
of the missing oilmen.
"One was detained yesterday and the other two on Monday.
I think we are closing in on them, we are closing in on the kidnappers,"
state spokesman Abel Oshevire told AFP by telephone from Asaba.
As he spoke the four hostages were beginning their third week
as the prisoners of self-declared separatist militants at a secret
location somewhere in the creeks and mangrove forests of the Niger
Delta.
The group which has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping
insisted that it has no links with the suspects held in Asaba,
and repeated a warning that the hostages would not be returned
until two ethnic Ijaw leaders are released.
"We gather these people were arrested for being unable to
provide the hostages after they were paid," said a statement
sent to AFP from an e-mail address previously used by the militants.
It said the authorities and the oil giant Shell had mistakenly
paid "agents such as these arrested persons, who lie about
affiliations to our group and promise to secure the release of
the hostages for a fee."
On January 11, armed ethnic Ijaw guerrillas boarded the Liberty
Service, an oil industry supply vessel operated by a subcontractor
to the energy giant Shell, and captured four foreign workers.
The boat's American skipper, Patrick Landry, British security
expert Nigel Watson-Clark, Bulgarian oil worker Milko Michev and
Honduran engineer Harry Ebanks, have since been held hostage in
the delta swamps.
Statements from the kidnappers have said the men will be held
until the Nigerian government releases two ethnic Ijaw figures:
guerrilla leader Mujahid Dokubo Asari and ousted state governor
Diepreye Alamieyeseigha.
Asari is on trial for treason after threatening to bring down
the Nigerian government, while Alamieyeseigha has been charged
with corruption after being accused of embezzling hundreds of
millions of dollars.
In addition to taking the hostages, the group has mounted armed
attacks on the oil facilities which produce Nigeria's sole significant
export and on the government troops which guard them.
On January 11 they blew up a major oil pipeline. Four days later,
gunmen overran a Shell oil production plant at Benisede in the
western delta and gunned down 14 soldiers and two Nigerian civilian
staff.
Then, on Tuesday, several boatloads of fighters clad in camouflage
fatigues and berets and toting assault rifles stormed an industrial
complex run by the Italian oil major Agip in the delta city of
Port Harcourt.
The gang shot dead eight police officers and one Nigerian worker,
seized a large sum of cash from a private Nigerian bank on the
premises, and made their escape back to the creeks surrounding
the city.
"The bandits took several million naira (several thousand
dollars / euros). They were very efficient, knew the layout of
the area and seemed to know that the money had come in to pay
salaries," said Italian consul Maurizio Bungaro.
"We are making some progress. We have sent more troops to
beef up what we already have on the ground in order to ensure
more security in the area," said Colonel Yusuf Mohammed,
spokesman for the Nigerian army.
"I can assure you that the government will leave no stone
unturned to ensure that these people are tracked down," said
Information Minister Frank Nweke.
Agip, a subsidiary of the Italian giant ENI, has temporarily evacuated
its Port Harcourt base.
Since the start of the attacks, Nigeria's oil output has been
cut by 211,000 barrels per day, or more than eight percent.
President Olusegun Obasanjo's government has said it is seeking
a "political solution" but seems to have made little
progress.
AFP
01/25/06
Copyright
© 2006 AFP. All rights reserved
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