Nine foreign oil workers seized in Nigeria (AP) Updated: 2006-02-19 09:34 Militants launched a wave of
attacks across Nigeria's troubled delta region Saturday, blowing up oil
installations and seizing nine foreigners, including three Americans. The
violence cut the West African nation's crude oil exports by 20 percent.
A fire was quickly put out on a Royal Dutch Shell platform that loads the
company's tankers in the western delta, but the Forcados terminal's normal
operations could not continue, halting the flow of 400,000 barrels a day.
"We can't load because there is some damage to the loading platform," Shell
official Donald Boham said.
Shell said it had also evacuated an oil platform off its Atlantic coast as a
precautionary measure, shutting off an additional 115,000 barrels a day.
There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Nigeria is Africa's leading oil exporter and the United States' fifth-largest
supplier, normally producing 2.5 million barrels a day.
On Friday, Shell shut down a facility pumping 37,800 barrels of crude daily
after an unexplained blaze at a nearby oil well. And the firm has yet to restore
106,000 daily barrels lost when a major pipeline supplying the Forcados terminal
was hit in a similar wave of attacks and hostage takings last month.
Oil prices jumped more than $1 and settled near $60 a barrel Friday on supply
concerns sparked by a militant threat to wage war on foreign oil interests.
In an e-mail to The Associated Press Saturday, the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta claimed responsibility for the attacks,
including the raid in which militants abducted three Americans, two Egyptians,
two Thais, one Briton and one Filipino.
The group, which claims to be fighting for a greater local share of the
country's oil wealth, said the attacks were carried out in retaliation for
assaults this week by military helicopters. The militants threatened more
violence would follow on "a grander scale."
More than 40 militants overpowered military guards before dawn Saturday and
seized the foreigners from a barge belonging to Houston-based oil services
company Willbros, which was laying pipeline for Shell, a Willbros official said
on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Militants identified each of the foreigners by name in their e-mail to the
AP. Britain's Foreign Office said the kidnapped Briton was John Hudspith of
southern England and did not offer further details.
In Houston, Willbros spokesman Michael Collier confirmed that nine employees
had been taken.
"We're still in the preliminary stages of getting information," he said. "We
have not had any communication with those involved. Right now, we're in the
process of contacting the families. The well-being of our people is foremost and
we're trying to keep this situation under control as best we can."
In Washington, State Department spokesman Noel Clay said: "We're working with
the Nigerian government and talking with them about this ... We call for their
unconditional release."
In other, apparently coordinated violence, militants blew up a major Shell
crude oil pipeline near a facility by the western delta's Chanomi Creek, Boham
said. The militants said they had targeted equipment feeding several smaller
pipelines.
Militants also claimed they destroyed a state-run pipeline that feeds gas
from the Escravos gas plant in the delta to the country's commercial capital,
Lagos. That attack could not be independently confirmed.
The militant group said the latest violence was a response to attacks by
military helicopters Wednesday and Friday on ethnic Ijaw communities in the
region.
The military said its helicopters targeted barges used by criminal gangs to
steal crude oil from pipelines in a thriving illegal trade sometimes taking up
to 10 percent of daily oil exports.
The militants have accused foreign oil companies of providing their
helicopters and air strips for military operations in the oil region. They said
they would now target all helicopters in the delta, including civilian aircraft.
On Saturday, the militants reiterated warnings that foreign oil workers must
leave the Niger Delta.
"Expatriates must realize that they have been caught up in a war, and the
Nigerian government can do nothing to guarantee the security of anyone," the
group said. "They are warned again to leave while the doors are still open."
Last month, militants held four men — from the United States, Britain,
Bulgaria and Honduras — for 19 days before releasing them unharmed.
Over the past two decades, oil companies in the Niger Delta have faced
frequent disruptions to their operations, including protests, pipeline sabotage
and kidnappings.
Most hostages, however, have been freed within days after ransom payments.
They are rarely harmed.
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