This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/8006961.stm
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 2 | Version 3 |
---|---|
Nigerian group frees UK hostage | |
(about 5 hours later) | |
A British man held hostage in Nigeria for more than six months has been freed, a military spokesperson said. | |
Colonel Rabe Abubakar told Reuters: "The British hostage has been released and he is currently with government authorities in Port Harcourt." | |
A militant group had held Robin Barry Hughes, 59, from St Margaret's Bay in Kent, since September. | |
Kidnapping is common in the Niger Delta by armed groups trying to force the government to share oil revenue. | Kidnapping is common in the Niger Delta by armed groups trying to force the government to share oil revenue. |
Kidnaps 'to continue' | Kidnaps 'to continue' |
The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) said in an e-mail earlier on Sunday that it would release Mr Hughes, an oil worker, "on health and age considerations". | |
There was no mention in the message of a second British hostage, Matthew Maguire, from Birkenhead, Merseyside. | |
Most of the 27 people captured in the September incident have already been released by the group. | Most of the 27 people captured in the September incident have already been released by the group. |
Mend said in January the two Britons would not be released until the Nigerian government freed the group's leader, Henry Okah, who is being tried on charges of arms trafficking. | Mend said in January the two Britons would not be released until the Nigerian government freed the group's leader, Henry Okah, who is being tried on charges of arms trafficking. |
Photographs of Mr Hughes and Mr Maguire were released in January, showing them looking dishevelled but uninjured in a forest clearing. | Photographs of Mr Hughes and Mr Maguire were released in January, showing them looking dishevelled but uninjured in a forest clearing. |
In an e-mail sent to journalists, Mend had said: "Since their fate is now tied to his, God forbid that Henry Okah should die in detention." | In an e-mail sent to journalists, Mend had said: "Since their fate is now tied to his, God forbid that Henry Okah should die in detention." |
Mend said militants would continue to kidnap "high value oil workers from Western Europe and North America" in 2009 to keep pressure on the government to empower the inhabitants of Nigeria's oil-rich states. | Mend said militants would continue to kidnap "high value oil workers from Western Europe and North America" in 2009 to keep pressure on the government to empower the inhabitants of Nigeria's oil-rich states. |