HomeHEADLINESPirates collect $.3m ransom, free 10 fishermen in Nigeria

Pirates collect $.3m ransom, free 10 fishermen in Nigeria

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By Valentine Amanze, Online Editor

Suspected pirates operating along West African coastal waters have freed 10 foreigners they abducted last month after collecting $300, 000 ransom.

The victims were freed at the weekend unharmed by Nigeria’s security forces in Rivers State, after Nigerian mediators paid the ransom.

A Nigerian Army officer, Col. Mohammed Yahaya, confirmed the release of the victims at a press conference Saturday night.

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The hostages were kidnapped on February 7, 2021 off the Atlantic coast of Gabon. Yahaya said that the freed seamen included six Chinese nationals, three Indonesians and a Gabonese, all thought to be fishermen.

Kidnapping for ransom has become a lucrative practice in Nigeria, according to AP.

Last week hundreds of Nigerian girls were released in the country’s northwest, after being abducted from the Government Girls Secondary School in Jangebe.

While officials did not say if a ransom had been paid, they said that “bandits” were behind the abduction, referring to the groups of armed men who operate in Zamfara State and kidnap for money.

After the abductions of the schoolgirls, Babagana Monguno, head of the government’s national security service, said on state television that banditry and kidnapping in the country were being sponsored by powerful non-state actors.

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He said that the bandits were “causing problems for the innocent citizens of Zamfara State.”

He said Nigeria’s intelligence and security agencies were investigating the bandits, who “will soon be arrested and brought to justice.”

A curfew and a no-fly zone had been placed on the state, he said.

The girls’ abductions came on the heels of the release of 24 students, six staff and eight relatives on Feb. 17 from the Government Science College Kagara in Niger State.

In December, more than 300 schoolboys from a secondary school in Kankara, Katsina State in North-Western Nigeria, were taken and later released.

The government has said no ransom was paid for the students’ release.

Paying ransoms is dangerous as it fuels pirates and bandits and “plays directly into their hands and feeds their playbook,” said Laith Alkhouri, an intelligence specialist with the consultancy CTI-ME Intelligence Advisory.

“Governments must become proactive in preventing hostage-taking attacks, whether against vessels, journalists or activists, including intelligence sharing on flashpoint areas and increased maritime and border security measures,” he said.

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