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British
oil worker hostage killed, Italian injured
AFP
LAGOS
Petroleumworld.com 11 23 06
A
kidnapped British oil worker was killed and an Italian injured on Wednesday
when Nigerian security forces attempted to rescue a group of seven foreign
oil workers held hostage by armed men in the oil-rich Niger Delta, the
Italian oil group Eni said in Rome.
While dozens of foreign and Nigerian oil workers have been taken hostage
in the troubled region this year, the Briton was the first foreign oil
worker to be killed in such clashes, in which some 60 Nigerian officers
have died.
"During the attempt by Nigerian military marines to free the seven
hostages on the FPSO Mystras, gunfire was exchanged during which a hostage
was killed while six others, one of whom was wounded, were freed and
are safe," the Italian oil firm said on its website.
Britain's Foreign Ministry late Wednesday confirmed that the hostage
killed was a British national. The injured hostage was identified as
Italian, the ANSA news agency reported, citing the foreign ministry
in Rome.
The oil company earlier identified the kidnapped workers as one Italian,
one Briton, a Filipino, two Finns, a Pole and a Romanian.
In Lagos, Nigerian police, who had confirmed the kidnapping, denied
all knowledge of the rescue attempt or of casualties.
But a spokesman for the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta
(MEND), an armed group which has in the past claimed responsibility
for other abductions and attacks on oil installations and workers said:
"I have just learnt that the hostage-takers ran into a naval patrol
and in the exchange, the Nigerian military killed one of the expatriate
hostages and severely injured another."
The MEND spokesman, who declined to give his name, said the hostages
"were abandoned in the exchange by the kidnappers who had insuffient
ammunition and only four rifles."
He said the hostages who survived are now in the hands of Saipem, the
Eni subsidiary whose vessel was attacked.
Nigeria, the world's sixth oil producer, accounts for some 2.6 million
barrels of crude in daily exports, but recent unrest in the Niger Delta
has cut back output by a quarter.
Eni, in a statement earlier Wednesday, said the seven were seized when
"ten armed men attacked the vessel Mystras, stationed on the Okono
field offshore from Port Harcourt" in southern Rivers state.
Nigerian national police spokesman Haz Iwendi said the incident occurred
between 2:00 am (0100 GMT) and 4:00 am (0300 GMT) some 60 nautical miles
from Bonny in Rivers State.
A western diplomat told AFP that 83 crew members were on board the vessel
when it was attacked and that the assailants "picked seven of them".
Iwendi told AFP that the assailants, who numbered about a dozen, identified
themselves as "Egbesu Boys" (the name of a local armed gang).
The Mystras was operated jointly by Saipem, Eni's construction and engineering
arm, and a second company identified only as SBM, Eni said.
No group has so far formally claimed responsibility for the attack.
The Niger Delta has seen a resurgence in violence since the beginning
of the year, with armed groups stepping up attacks on oil installations
and personnel.
The groups, who frequently kidnap foreign oil workers, say they are
seeking a larger share of the country's oil wealth and jobs for the
local community.
Since the start of the year, dozens of local and foreign workers have
been kidnapped and released after spending days or even weeks in captivity,
while around 60 security personnel have been killed during confrontations
with the militants.
Some of the oil companies targeted are known to have paid large amounts
for the release of hostages, but none has ever publicly admitted to
doing so.
Wednesday's incident comes barely three days after militants vacated
an oil pumping station operated by Agip on Sunday after a two-week siege,
freeing some 30 workers and soldiers.
Gunmen had occupied Agip's Tebidaba flowstation in Bayelsa state on
November 6, but officials said no expatriate workers were involved in
the attack.
The company was forced to shut down operation at the facility because
of the seizure, losing around 50,000 barrels of crude in daily output.
joa/ade/ccr
AFP 22 2301 GMT 11 06
Copyright©
2006 AFP. All Rights Reserved.
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