Stop kidnapping campaign |
Gunmen
abducted three Chinese workers after a shootout that left a police officer dead
in central Nigeria, police said Saturday.
"Three
Chinese nationals were abducted by some unknown gunmen within the early hours
of Friday," a senior police officer told AFP, requesting anonymity. He said
the gunmen had stormed a quarry outside Lokoja, the capital of Kogi state, and
engaged the policemen on guard in a shootout.
AFP report continues:
"One
policeman was killed while another sustained gunshot wounds," the senior police officer said. He said
the assailants escaped with their hostages on foot through the bush, adding
that police were on their trail.
It was
unknown whether the kidnappers were planning to demand a ransom.
Kogi state
has seen a wave of abductions targeting foreigners this year.
Two weeks
ago, two other Chinese nationals were kidnapped in the state, while an American
missionary was taken from her school last month.
The
missionary, who works in the village of Emiworo where her Free Methodist Church
runs a community organization, was released last week.
State
police said they were unaware of any ransom paid for her liberation.
Foreign
nationals have often been kidnapped in Nigeria by local gangs who typically release
hostages following a ransom payment.
Such
abductions are especially common in the southern, oil-producing Niger Delta,
where expatriates working with large oil companies have been a frequent target.
A number
of foreigners have also been kidnapped in the north of the country, but those
attacks claimed by Boko Haram or the linked Islamist group Ansaru are
considered a different phenomenon, and not necessarily motivated by a desire
for ransom.
A number of people
seized by Nigerian Islamists have been killed by their captors, while others
have died during botched rescue operations.
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