Foreign oil workers kidnapped in Nigeria (AP) Updated: 2006-01-12 18:43
Gunmen stormed an offshore oil platform run by Royal
Dutch Shell in Nigeria and seized four foreign oil workers, a company official
said Thursday.
People walk past the Dutch oil giant Shells sign board in
Port Harcourt in the volatile Niger delta region of Nigeria September 23,
2005. Unidentified armed men have kidnapped four foreign oil workers
including an American and a Briton from an offshore oilfield in Nigeria
operated by Royal Dutch Shell, authorities said on Thursday.
[Reuters] |
The workers were kidnapped late Wednesday from an anchored supply vessel at
Shell's EA oil platform in shallow waters off the southern Niger Delta and taken
to an unknown location, the Shell official said on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorized to speak to the media. He had no other details,
and the nationalities of the kidnapped workers were not immediately known.
Britain's Press Association reported at least one Briton was believed to be
among those kidnapped, citing an unnamed company official.
Local communities in Nigeria have been demanding a greater share of revenues
from the oil flowing from their land for years. Hostage-taking is common, and
kidnapped workers are usually released unharmed.
Shell workers running the EA platform have been taken hostage twice in the
past year over a dispute with neighboring communities, who accuse the company of
reneging on a promise to undertake development projects for their impoverished
region.
A Croatian was seized in December 2004 and freed days later. Two Germans and
four Nigerian oil workers were taken hostage in June and later freed.
Nigeria produces about 2.5 million barrels of oil a day.
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