Nigeria navy frees 28 kidnapped oil workers

Piracy, kidnapping common around Niger Delta

LAGOS (Reuters) — Nigeria's navy said it had freed 28 local oil workers who were being held hostage by a criminal gang in the oil-producing Niger Delta.

The hostages were Nigerian employees of Chinese oil servicing firm Sinopec, navy spokesman Commodore Kabir Aliyu said.

They were kidnapped on Thursday by a gang called the Lapto Marine Force operating around the Bakassi waterways in Cross Rivers state and freed in the naval operation late on Friday, he said.

"The gang... has been terrorizing people around Bakassi waterways, killing, robbing, as well as engaging in piracy and abduction," he added.

Piracy and kidnapping are common around the Niger Delta. West Africa's oil-rich Gulf of Guinea is second only to the waters off Somalia for the risk of attacks.

Four foreigners working for Netherlands-based Sea Trucks Group who were kidnapped by pirates off the Nigerian coast on Aug. 4 were released last week.

 

Latest stories