Niger Delta gunmen have released three Dutch nationals who were
abducted last week, the Dutch foreign ministry confirmed on Sunday.
“I
can confirm they have been freed,” said ministry spokesman Johanne
Doornewaard, adding that the Dutch ambassador to Nigeria was heading to
the Delta region, where the abduction had taken place.
Amsterdam-based
environmental activist Sunny Ofehe and the three Dutch nationals, two
men and a woman, were seized Sunday after armed men in a dinghy stormed
their boat.
The group, which included another Netherlands-based
Nigerian, were blindfolded and eventually taken to an unknown location
where the two Nigerians were abandoned.
“I just want to inform
everyone that they are free, and that they are safe and in good health,”
Ofehe told Dutch broadcaster NOS TV.
Scores of foreigners have
been abducted in the southern Niger Delta region, home to Africa’s
largest oil industry, with many released on payment of a ransom.
Employees
of foreign oil companies are required to have an armed escort when
travelling in the Delta, but international journalists, aid workers and
others typically avoid taking a security detail.
Dutch printing
company Gerrits & Leffers had confirmed that two of its employees
were among those abducted and that the pair were in Nigeria to help
Niger Delta peace activists publish a magazine.
The third Dutch
national was a documentary filmmaker, NOS TV reported, and the group was
en route to visit a hospital financed by oil company Chevron when the
kidnapping took place.
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