Chinese
workers abducted in Nigeria
AFP
NEW
YORK
Petroleumworld.com 01 26 06
Gunmen on Thursday abducted several Chinese workers in the southern
Nigerian oil state of Bayelsa in the third kidnapping in the space
of a week, police and industry officials said.
"I can confirm to you that some Chinese have been abducted at
Sagbama", Bayelsa State police commissioner Hafiz Ringim told
AFP.
The exact number of men, identified as workers of the China National
Petroleum Corp (CNPC), abducted or missing was still unclear.
Bayelsa State government spokesman Ekiyor Welson told AFP: "Two
people were taken. Both were employees of CNPC."
But national police spokesman Haz Iwendi said: "Nine people are
missing." He added that he did not know whether all nine had
been abducted or whether some were perhaps in hiding.
Meanwhile an oil industry official in Port Harcourt, Nigeria's oil
capital in neighbouring Rivers State, said: "It's sure that three
men were taken and a fourth one is missing.
The Bayelsa spokesman said the state government was "trying to
make contact" with the men, taken by their captors to an unknown
location.
Gunmen also raided the CNPC office and staff living quarters and took
an unspecified amount of cash, the police and industry officials said.
"The motive for this attack was money", an industry official
in Warri, an oil city in neighbouring Delta State, told AFP.
Chinese embassy officials were not available for comment.
No party has so far claimed responsibility for the attack. The most
prominent separatist group in the region, the Movement for the Emancipation
of the Niger Delta (MEND), told AFP it was not involved in the abduction.
"It was likely carried out for money", the group's spokesman
said in an email.
This is the second time so far this month that Chinese working in
Africa's biggest oil-producing country have been seized.
On January 5, gunmen abducted five Chinese telecoms workers from their
residence and ferried them to an unknown location. The workers were
employees of Sichuan Telecommunications Company. They were working
on a project to extend telephone services to rural areas when they
were seized.
They were released by their unidentified kidnappers on January 17
and have since returned home.
Since the beginning of 2006, dozens of foreign workers, mainly in
the oil industry, have been kidnapped in the Niger Delta region.
The kidnappers are a mixture of criminal gangs lured by the idea of
easy money and separatist groups with political agendas, security
experts say.
Residents of the Niger Delta, where the Ijaw people are the largest
single ethnic group, complain that while the region generates 95 percent
of Nigeria's foreign currency earnings, they have little to show for
this in terms of development or living standards.
On Tuesday, a US citizen and a Briton were abducted and a ransom demand
of about 13.8 million dollars is said to have been made.
Twenty four Filipinos, two Italians and one Lebanese national are
also currently being held hostage in the delta.
Security advisors in the region see no political agenda against Asian
workers on the part of their abductors. Rather, they said, it is a
question of how easy it is to seize workers of different nationalities.
One pointed out that the draconian security measures put in place
by western oil companies make seizing westerners difficult, "whereas
for the Chinese and the Koreans, life is cheap".
Conversely, among the gangs "there is obviously more kudos in
seizing an American", the advisor added.
Another security expert said it was to be expected that Chinese should
be targeted as Chinese companies are being awarded more and more contracts
and Chinese workers are therefore coming into Nigeria in ever-greater
numbers.
The 24 Filipinos, who were abducted on January 20 in nearby Delta
State, have yet to be released although negotiations are underway
between state government officials and the community holding the men.
AFP
25 1948 GMT 01 07
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