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Friday 19 July 2013

Briton kidnapped on arrival at Lagos airport

“The BHM is working closely with others to secure the release of the hostage. Because of the nature of this incident, the BHM is not going into further detail about it,” Reuters quoted the High Commission as saying in a statement by Wale Adebayo, spokesman at the Deputy High Commission in Lagos. He declined to provide any details, including the day the attack occurred.


A private security source familiar with incident however told AFP that the British man was abducted  while travelling into the city after landing at the airport.  The attackers opened fire on the vehicle and “the driver was injured by a gunshot,” before the Briton was seized, added the source, who requested anonymity.  He said there were strong indications that the gunmen were seeking a ransom payment.

There is typically heavy traffic well into the night on most roads leading from the airport in the Ikeja neighbourhood towards central Lagos.  It was not clear where the attack occurred, or whether there were witnesses nearby.

The kidnapping of foreigners for ransom is common in Nigeria, particularly around the oil-rich southern coast, and there has also been a rise in such incidents in Lagos.  In March a British man working for the French energy company CGG was kidnapped in the upscale Victoria Island area of the city.  He was released days later, with officials refusing to confirm reports that a ransom had been paid.  In the oil-producing Niger Delta region, foreigners working in the oil sector are often released following an armed abduction. Their employers and officials typically do not reveal details about ransoms.

Foreigners have also been kidnapped in the north, but those attacks are considered a different and have been blamed on Islamist extremists.  A Briton was among seven foreigners kidnapped in February from a construction site in the northern Bauchi state in attack claimed by the Islamist group Ansaru.  Ansaru later posted a video on YouTube that appeared to show the corpses of some of the hostages.  In 2010, 28-year-old Briton Chris McManus was abducted along with an Italian national, Franco Lamolinara, in northern Kebbi state.  They were both killed in northwestern Sokoto state nearly a year later amid a rescue operation jointly planned by British and Nigerian authorities and authorised by British Prime Minister David Cameron.  That attack was later also blamed on Ansaru, a group which is seen as an offshoot Boko Haram, the Islamist insurgents who have also targeted foreigners. 

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