Nigerian militant group the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) said all the hostages taken from an Italian-operated offshore oilfield earlier on Thursday have been released.
The self-styled leader of Mend said his group had not intended to take more hostages, having seized six foreign workers from a United States-operated oilfield on Tuesday.
”They have all been released within the last five minutes and are on their way to Port Harcourt,” said the leader, who uses the pseudonym Jomo Gbomo.
There was no immediate confirmation of the release from the company or security agencies.
Gbomo said eight people were taken from the Mystras oil production vessel, operated by Saipem and SBM Offshore, which normally produces about 50 000 barrels per day of crude oil.
Saipem’s parent company Eni put the number of abducted at six, including one British, one Australian, one Polish, two Croats and one Romanian.
Mend, which says it is fighting for more regional control of the delta’s oil wealth, has said the six hostages taken on Tuesday from a Chevron oilfield would be released unconditionally on May 30.
That kidnapping was meant to serve as a denial of local media reports that the group supported the election of Umaru Yar’Adua in a presidential poll on April 21, Mend has said.
Mend has distanced itself from a report in ThisDay newspaper, which quoted a purported Mend leader voicing support for Yar’Adua’s election on the grounds that he chose Goodluck Jonathan, who comes from the delta region, as his vice-presidential running mate. — Reuters