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Nigerian youths free dozens of
kidnapped workers
By Jacques Lhuillery
AFP
LAGOS
Petroleumworld.com
10 12 06
Armed youths have released dozens of Nigerian employees of the oil company
Shell and its subcontractors, but around 15 workers are still being
held at a flow station in the restive Niger Delta, security sources
said Wednesday.
Around 60 workers were taken hostage Tuesday morning when the armed
youths seized the Shell flow station on the Nun river in Bayelsa State.
"The majority of these people were released very late Tuesday,"
a Shell official said in the oil centre of Port Harcourt.
"Fifteen are still detained, but there is hope that they might
likely be released today. Negotiations are going on."
According to different sources, there are no foreigners amongst the
hostages, kidnapped by the youths to protest that Shell has not implemented
an agreement it had with the Oporoma community to improve their standard
of living.
The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) one of the
principal separatist groups in the area, said it was not responsible
for the hostage-taking.
Shell, which did not release the identities either of those freed or
those still being held, said there had been no casualties in the attack
but said "the Nun river flow station has been shut, resulting in
production loss of some 12,000 barrels of oil per day."
The Anglo-Dutch company, which produces about half the total exports
of Nigerian crude oil of 2.6 million barrels a day, is losing about
477,000 barrels a day because of recurrent violence in the region.
Over the past nine months, dozens of wells and oil platforms have been
closed and workers evacuated.
There was no news, meanwhile, of the four Scots, a Malaysian, an Indonesian
and a Romanian who worked for the oil service firms Oceaneering and
Sparrows, sub-contractors to ExxonMobil, who were kidnapped over a week
ago in Akwa Ibom State.
The hostage-taking, described by some as "labour talks a la Nigerian"
made the headlines of many newspapers Wednesday whereas most incidents
in the delta are relegated to the inside pages as they have become so
routine.
Last week 14 Nigerian soldiers were killed and 25 Shell employees kidnapped
in another attack in the neighbouring Rivers State by about 70 heavily-armed
men aboard fast boats.
Those 25 were released two days later.
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo called a crisis meeting with senior
officials in the security services last week to evalute the situation
in this region, vital to Nigeria's economy as oil production from the
Niger Delta accounts for 95 percent of the country's foreign currency
revenues.
Tensions have flared in the area because its inhabitants not only live
on an average of less than one dollar a day but they also complain that
their water and soil is being polluted by the oil-companies.
AFP
11 1150 GMT 10 06
Copyright
©2006 AFP.
All Rights Reserved.
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