By REUTERS
Published: January 5, 2007

Filed at 8:42 a.m. ET

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/world/international-nigeria-kidnap.html

AB
UJA 
(Reuters) - Gunmen in Nigeria's volatile southern Niger Delta abducted
five Chinese workers in the early hours of Friday in what appeared to be
a kidnapping for ransom, authorities said.

The police commissioner of Rivers state, where the kidnapping took
place, said a group of armed youths broke into the apartment where the
workers were staying in a remote village and forced them away at
gunpoint.

Abductions for ransom are common in the oil-producing delta.

``The bottom line will probably be a demand for money. I have already
got in touch with local people to get any information they may have and
I am sure we will find out where they are being held,'' Felix Ogbaudu
told Reuters by telephone.

He said the five had been working on a government contract for a rural
telephone project in the Emohua area but he did not have the name of the
company that employs them.

The Chinese embassy in Abuja said it was in contact with authorities in
Rivers to try and secure the men's release.

``The embassy is taking an active role in trying to rescue them,'' said
press secretary Zhang Hong Liang.

Energy-hungry China has been strengthening ties with Nigeria, offering
investments and technical help with Nigerian infrastructure in return
for good deals on oil drilling rights and supplies of crude.

A security expert working for a major oil company in the region said he
had heard the five men were taken by ''community-based militants.'' This
means the kidnappers were likely to be youths from the local area
seeking a ransom rather than members of an organized militia pressing
political demands. 

FREQUENT KIDNAPPINGS

Three Italians and one Lebanese working for Italian oil company Agip
have been held captive in a different part of the delta since December 7
after they were kidnapped by fighters from the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).

Kidnappings have plagued the delta for many years but they intensified
in 2006 and many fear the violence will worsen in the build-up to
Nigeria's general elections in April.

Almost all hostages in the delta are released unharmed after their
employers and local authorities pay ransoms. However, one Briton and one
Nigerian were killed last year in separate botched attempts by Nigerian
troops to free them.

Nigeria, the world's eighth-biggest exporter of crude oil, gets all its
oil from the Niger Delta but residents of the impoverished wetlands
region complain that they have been neglected by central and local
governments.

Poverty and high unemployment fuel militancy and crime. The Nigerian
security forces are unable to control the remote waterways of the delta
where kidnappings, attacks on oil facilities and theft of crude oil are
commonplace.

The MEND, which says it wants greater local control of oil assets and
compensation from companies for oil spills, launched a series of attacks
last February that forced the closure of a fifth of Nigeria's oil output
capacity.

The faceless group has said it did not want money for the four Agip
workers it is currently holding captive but would release them in
exchange for four prisoners of Niger Delta origin held in Nigerian
jails.

As well as politically motivated campaigns by groups like the MEND,
attacks and abductions by local youths embittered by the lack of
prospects and infrastructure are common.

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