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UK oil worker seized off Nigeria | UK oil worker seized off Nigeria |
(about 1 hour later) | |
A Briton has been kidnapped from an oil ship off the Nigerian coast, company sources said. | |
The Foreign Office is investigating claims militants seized two expatriate oil workers - from the US and Britain - during an armed raid. | |
A spokesman for Petroleum Geo-Services, based in Norway, has confirmed two of its workers have been taken. | |
Another unnamed official said they were taken from the southern coast by gunmen, who sped away in boats. | |
Christopher Mollerlokken, spokesman for the company, which provides seismic data for the oil and gas industry, said: "We can confirm that a British national and an American national who are both employed by the company have been kidnapped." | |
It is not yet known whether the Briton is a man or a woman. | |
A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We can confirm that the British consulate is looking into reports that a British national has been kidnapped. We are unable to confirm any details at this time." | |
Attacks common | |
Hostage-taking has become a lucrative business for armed groups in the region - an area of creeks and swamps about the size of Scotland. | |
BBC Correspondent Alex Last in Lagos said a number of different armed groups have taken hostages in the last few months. | |
Almost all have demanded ransoms for their release, sometimes in the form of compensation deals for local communities who feel short-changed by the oil companies operating in their area. | |
He said: "Militancy has been on the rise in the Niger Delta. At its root is local anger at widespread poverty and pollution of their environment by the oil industry. | |
"Out of this armed groups have sprung up, some criminal, some more political - often the line is blurred." | |
He added that with elections approaching next year, many fear the violence is going to get worse. | |
In October four British oil workers were seized and later released after gunmen raided a residential compound housing expatriate staff. | |
The latest kidnappings come despite Nigeria's President Olusegun Obasanjo promise in September to take strong action to curb the armed groups. |