Two Germans kidnapped in Nigeria freed: government

AFP
AFP Global Edition

Apr 24, 2010 11:46 EDT

Two Germans kidnapped in Nigeria nearly a week ago have been freed, Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle announced on Saturday.

The men, aged 45 and 55, were abducted in Abia state in the oil-rich southern Niger Delta on Sunday, after going swimming in the Imo River.

They "have been freed" and are safe and sound, the minister said in a statement. "They are well considering the circumstances," he said.

A Nigerian security source said earlier this week that one of the men worked in Port Harcourt, the oil city capital of neighbouring Rivers State, while the other came from Nigeria's commercial capital of Lagos.

According to police, the two foreigners had come to the river to swim in company of three young Nigerian women and a driver. The kidnappers seized both Germans after the swimming while the girls and the driver escaped.

Nigerian officials could not immediately confirm they had been released.

Westerwelle said the pair were in a secure location in Port Harcourt.

He thanked German and Nigerian authorities for their "tireless intervention" which he said had resulted in a swift end to the ordeal of the abducted men.

No group has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping and there has been no mention of whether the abductors received a ransom.

Hundreds of foreigners and locals, mostly oil workers, have been kidnapped since 2006 in Nigeria, most of them in the Niger Delta. Many have been released unharmed, but in some cases only after payment of a ransom.

Source: AFP Global Edition

 

Related Stories