 |
| Armed groups have seized dozens of foreign oil workers this year |
|
One Briton has been killed during clashes between Nigerian troops and kidnappers who had abducted seven men from an offshore oil facility.
"During the attempt by Nigerian military marines to free the seven hostages on the FPSO Mystras, gunfire was exchanged during which a hostage was killed," ENI, the oil company that owns the facility, said.
"Six others, one of whom was wounded, were freed and are safe," the Italian company, said on its website on Wednesday
The oil workers were captured by armed men in speedboats, an ENI spokesman said. Two kidnappers were reportedly killed in the shootout.
The Briton was the first expatriate oil worker to be killed after being taken hostage in Nigeria, Nigerian security sources told Reuters news agency.
Firefight
Security sources said a firefight broke out between Nigerian forces and the kidnappers after they ran into a military patrol while the hostages were in their boats.
ENI closed down its Okono/Okpoho oilfield - which produces 50,000 barrels a day - after the kidnapping, an industry source said.
Another source said the attack was "community-related", referring to disputes between oil companies and nearby villages about employment, infrastructure and other benefits.
Dozens of mostly foreign oil workers have been seized this year but most have been released unharmed after talks involving the local government.
Nigeria - Africa's top oil producer - has already cut output by a fifth since February, when armed groups fighting for control of the delta's oil wealth attacked pipelines, platforms and export terminals.
The groups want to see the region receive a more money from the oil extraction that has resulted in huge revenues for the federal government and oil firms.
|