Militants release Italian hostages

Reuters) – Nigerian militants on Thursday released two Italian oil workers they had been holding hostage in remote creeks in the oil-producing Niger Delta for more than three months, a Reuters witness said

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), which demands greater autonomy for Africa’s top oil province, had seized the employees of Italian-owned Agip, a unit of ENI, in a raid on an oil export terminal on December 7.

MEND, which emerged in late 2005 and forced the closure of a fifth of Nigerian output with attacks on oil facilities in February 2006, said in a statement it would step up attacks on the industry and stage bombings across the delta.

Agip and the Bayelsa state government are at the top of the group’s “to-do list,” MEND said, because it blames them for helping a Lebanese hostage escape from its custody last month.

“We will take more hostages and concentrate on locations believed to be secure to dispel the false sense of security being felt by some in the oil industry and foreign industry watchers,” it said in the email statement.

Heavily armed militants dropped the Italians, Francesco Arena and Cosma Russo, with a small group of journalists at an oil company boat yard on the outskirts of Port Harcourt.

They appeared to be in good health, but were sporting long beards and said they were suffering from stress.

“We were treated very well by the militants. We were in a jungle, they treated us better than they treated themselves,” Arena said, adding they had given him bottled water to drink.

“The only complaint I have is they kept us too long as hostages because if it was short maybe we can understand they are fighting for freedom, but to keep us for 98 days is too long,” he told Reuters.

DECLINING SECURITY

MEND said it used the Italians to highlight the problems of the Niger Delta to the people of Italy. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi told his Nigerian counterpart on Monday he was deeply concerned about their safety.

“The Italians were originally supposed to have been kept until the exit of the Nigerian despot,” MEND said in the email, referring to President Olusegun Obasanjo, who is due to step down in May.

“Their premature release is in response to pleas from certain quarters, which could not be ignored. This will not be repeated for future captives we will shortly take for as long as the Nigerian government refuses to address our demands.”

MEND wants regional control over the delta’s oil resources, the release of two jailed leaders from the area and compensation to delta villages for decades of oil pollution.

Kidnappings of foreign oil workers, mostly for ransoms, multiplied in the delta in January and February although most hostages have now been released.

The only expatriate still in captivity is a French contractor for oil company Total who was abducted by suspected ransom-seekers on February 7.

Oil companies have reinforced security across the vast wetlands region, and thousands of oil workers and their families have left because of declining security.

Poverty and a lack of basic public services due to corruption in government lie at the root of violence in the delta, which accounts for all oil production from OPEC member Nigeria, the world’s eighth-biggest exporter of crude.

MEND has insisted that it does not take ransoms for its hostages, but many groups do, and the line between militancy and crime is blurred.

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