Tag: MEND

  • Bayelsa police explain attack

    The Bayelsa State Police Command explained yesterday that its gunboat was not attacked because it provided cover for an ex-militant leader, Eris Paul, alias Ogunboss.

    The police gunboat was attacked at Peremabiri, a riverine community in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area on Saturday, leading to a gun battle.

    The Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) on Sunday said it attacked the gunboat because it was escorting Ogunboss.

    But the police explained that they were on a mission to rescue seven members of Ogunboss’ family, who were attacked and driven out of the community by armed youths.

    Police spokesman Alex Akhigbe, in a statement in Yenagoa, said when the police arrived at the community, they discovered that Ogunboss’ family had been rescued by naval gunboats stationed close to the area.

    He said: “The youths of the community threw dynamite at the gunboat and shot at the policemen.

    “Our policemen, who were surprised at the unprovoked attack withdrew to avoid any confrontation. It is unthinkable for anybody to say that two persons died in the attack.”

  • MEND: we attacked Agip tugboat, abducted engineer, captain

    MEND: we attacked Agip tugboat, abducted engineer, captain

    The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), yesterday claimed that it was responsible for the attack on a tugboat belonging to the Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC).

    The group, in a statement by its spokesman, Gbomo Jomo, admitted that its fighters abducted the engineer and the captain of the boat.

    It said the onslaught was carried out by its trainee fighters along the Nembe-Bassanbiri waterway in Bayelsa State.

    MEND said: “This relatively insignificant attack is a reminder of our presence in the creeks of the Niger Delta and a sign of things to come. Contrary to speculations, they were not ‘sea pirates’, but a new group of MEND ‘trainee fighters’.

    “Our silence has been strategic. At the right time, precisely next year, we will reduce the country’s oil production to zero and drive off our land, all thieving oil companies.

    “In this new phase of our struggle for justice, MEND will pay attention to dealing with the occupying Nigerian government forces in the Niger Delta, who stand in our way.”

    Seven gunmen on Saturday attacked a tugboat belonging to Agip and whisked away the engineer and captain.

    “They took them to an unknown place. Nobody knows their whereabouts,” a security source said.

    The source, who pleaded for anonymity, said the incident occurred at an area called Peter’s town in Nembe Local Government Area.

    “The tugboat was coming from Port Harcourt in Rivers State to Brass, maybe to load petroleum products at the terminal. But suddenly, about seven gunmen, waylaid and boarded it”, he said.

    The source said the boat had six crew members at the time it was attacked by the hoodlums.

    He said four were dispossessed of their valuables, while the captain and the engineer were whisked away for a ransom.

     

  • We attacked Agip tugboat, abducted crew members – MEND

    The Movement for Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), on Monday claimed that it was responsible for the attack on a tugboat belonging to the Agip Nigerian Oil Company (NAOC).
    MEND in a statement signed by its spokesman, Gbomo Jomo, also admitted that its fighters abducted the engineer and the captain of the boat.
    It said the onslaught was carried out by some of its trainee fighters along the Nembe-Bassanbiri waterways in Bayelsa State.
    MEND said in the statement: “This relatively insignificant attack is a reminder of our presence in the creeks of the Niger Delta and a sign of things to come. Contrary to speculations, they were not ‘sea pirates’, but a new group of MEND ‘Trainee fighters.
    “Our silence thus far, has been strategic and at the right time, we will reduce Nigerian oil production to zero by 2015 and drive off our land, all thieving oil companies.
    “In this new phase of our struggle for justice, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) will pay considerable attention to dealing with the occupying Nigerian government forces in the Niger Delta that stand in our way.”
    Gunmen numbering seven had on Saturday attacked a tugboat belonging to Agip and whisked away an engineer and a captain of the vessel.
    “They took them to an unknown place. Nobody has been able to know their whereabouts,” a security source said.
    The source who pleaded anonymity said the incident occurred at an area known as Peter’s town in Nembe Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.
    “The tugboat was coming from Port Harcourt in Rivers State to Brass maybe to load petroleum product at the terminal. But suddenly, gunmen who were about seven in number double-crossed it and boarded it,” he said.
    He said the boat had about six crew members at the time it was stormed by the hoodlums.
    While four others were dispossessed of their valuables, the captain and the engineer were reportedly whisked away for ransom.

  • Senate summons Warri Refinery MD

    Senate summons Warri Refinery MD

    The Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) yesterday invited the Managing Director of Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company, Chief Paul Obelley, over the October 22 fire incident at the plant.

    The Warri Refinery boss was asked to appear before the committee with top management of the refinery on October 31 to explain the circumstances surrounding the fire incident at the refinery.

    Besides the MD is also expected “to give comprehensive details on the causes, level of facilities damage, fatality at the plant and efforts so far made to prevent further recurrence.”

    The committee is said to have decided to investigate the immediate and remote causes of the fire with a view to recommending prosecution of any person found culpable in the incident.

    The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) has claimed responsibility for the fire incident.

    A statement purportedly by MEND noted that Hurricane Exodus was intended to burn down the entire refinery.

     

     

    MEND allegedly said: “As long as President Goodluck Jonathan continues to rely on an unsustainable and fraudulent Niger Delta amnesty programme, peace and security will continue to elude his government in the region. Hurricane Exodus is on course!”

  • JTF blasts MEND

    The Joint Task Force (JTF) Operation Pulo Shield has decried the claims of responsibilities by the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) for criminal incidents in the region last week.

    It described such claims as a fluke, saying they emanated from a group of drowning gangsters.

    JTF in a statement by its Media-Coordinator, Lt. Col. Onyema Nwachukwu, said the militant group had tried in vain to portray the region as insecure.

    He said MEND had resorted to feeding the public with lies to portray its grossly-failed Hurricane Exodus as effective.

    “These claims are a reflection of the grandiose illusion of drowning gangsters. It is no longer news that their insatiable and desperate desire to conjure up a seeming apocalypse in order to make the world see the Niger Delta as insecure has again failed, as it has continuously fed the public with lies of a grossly- failed Hurricane Exodus.”

  • Time to amend MEND

    Someone recently quipped that a time might come when the wives of prominent persons in Nigeria will become pregnant and MEND would claim responsibility. This jibe comes on the heels of the recent activities of the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta, MEND. First was the kidnap of the sister of the Senior Adviser to the President on Research and Documentation, Mr. Oronto Douglas and the second, the fire-bombing of the Warri Refinery and Petrochemical Company last Tuesday.

    Concerning the kidnap of Mrs. Augusta Douglas-Ayam, (she has been released) MEND had claimed that though it did not commit the act, it was in touch with the culprits whose grouse is about the manner the amnesty programmed is being handled. But in the case of the refinery facility, MEND in an email statement signed apparently by its now famous spokesperson who goes by the name, Jomo Gbomo, the group claimed responsibility for the sabotage.

    It said further that: “Hurricane Exodus was intended to burn down the entire refining facility. As long as President Goodluck Jonathan continues to rely on an unsustainable and fraudulent Niger Delta Amnesty Programme, peace and security will continue to elude his government in the region. Hurricane Exodus is on course.”

    Hardball is worried at this turn of event at MEND considering that in the halcyon days of militancy in the Niger Delta, it was this group that gave the ‘struggle’ class, a shade of sophistication and of course respectability. It introduced the use of email and intelligent use of the media to disseminate information widely and further its cause. It also seemed to ensure limited human casualty in its engagements choosing to attack facilities when it is ‘dry’ and ‘safe’. While others were daily rampaging and foraging for spoils, MEND seemed to have its eye set on the larger picture of attempting to call attention to the plight of the people of the oil-rich region. The mindless environmental devastation by oil firms and criminal neglect of the people were high points.

    However, with the Abuja bombings of October, 2011 and the subsequent trial and conviction of Henry Okah who is perhaps the author and architect of MEND, Hardball if he were a member, would sue for a rethink of strategies and a possible rapprochement. The Abuja strike in itself may be a tactical error considering that the election of President Goodluck Jonathan ought to stand as one of the victories of MEND’s activism. Why would a man seek to destroy the prize of a hard-fought battle? Any wonder President Jonathan spoke off the cuff that he knew his people and that they would not bomb him. It turned out he spoke too quick. If the purpose of the ‘struggle’ is to get their due, why intensify action just when you are about to reap a windfall.

    Yes, the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP) is not flawless but it has achieved ample results. It has calmed the Niger Delta considerably, it has engaged a large number of the boys, especially the ‘militants of fortune’, who had no cause nor understood any cause for that matter, but only sought to improve their lives by partaking in the spoils of the oil boom. PAP cannot and will never capture everyone. It also will be fraught with mismanagement and even fraud but can we begin to contemplate what might have been if it was not initiated.

    There is time to fight and time to sheathe the sword. MEND must rethink its strategies; Nigerians don’t know what it is fighting for anymore and it may no longer have the sympathy of the generality of the people it purports to defend. To what end is ‘Hurricane Exodus’ and for whose benefit? If the massive refinery in Warri is bombed and razed, how has that furthered the cause of MEND or benefited Niger Delta people? MEND must reach out to its kinsman in Aso-Rock, this is the best opportunity it has to achieve its purpose, whatever it may be.

  • MEND: $200,000 ransom paid  for Oronto Douglas’ sister

    MEND: $200,000 ransom paid for Oronto Douglas’ sister

    THE Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) yesterday revealed it collected a ransom of $200,000 before releasing 48-year-old Mrs. Auguster Douglas-Ayam, a sister to the Special Adviser to President Goodluck Jonathan on Research, Strategy and Documentation, Oronto Douglas.

    Douglas-Ayam was kidnapped around 8:45 pm penultimate Monday at the waterfront of Ogbia Town in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    An initial ransom of N500 million was placed on her but MEND said the family paid $200,000 to facilitate her freedom.

    In an online statement last night signed by the spokesperson of the militant group, Jomo Gbomo, MEND gave graphic details of how the refinery in Warri, Delta state was attacked on October 22, leading to an explosion.

    It also vowed to continue attacking oil installations in the Niger Delta region.

    The militant group said: “The sister of Mr. Oronto Douglas was released unharmed, as we promised. She, however, had developed high blood pressure and malaria while in captivity.

    “Contrary to the claim by the Douglas family that no ransom was paid, MEND can authoritatively confirm that the sum of $200,000 was paid as ransom.”

    On how the Warri refinery was attacked, MEND said: “In the early hours of Wednesday, October 23, 2013, an armed auxiliary outfit (referred by the authorities as pirates), attacked a United States flagged oil supply vessel and singled out the two Americans on board.

    “This action (kidnap of two Americans) was also to show their disdain and content for an ongoing Joint Naval Exercise with foreign navies in the Delta region. We have informed their abductors that Mr. Henry Okah (one of the leaders of MEND, serving jail term in a South African prison.) would have wanted the men released as soon as possible.

    “The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), which we earlier infiltrated with the full recruitment of a high-level agent, resulted in the successful sabotage from within (of Warri refinery) on October 22, 2013.

    “Throwing a spanner in the works does not require rocket science or commando skills to execute. It only takes a belief in our cause to make things happen.”

    MEND also stated that in neighbouring Rivers State, on the same day the Warri refinery was sabotaged, a Joint Task Force (JTF) escort gunboat was engaged in a shootout in the Andoni Local Government Area.

    Contrary to the version given by the JTF, the militant group maintained that the soldiers were not ambushed but confronted, claiming the attackers were not armed robbers but MEND fighters.

    It castigated repentant militants, challenging them to come out of their hiding place.

    The statement added: “Some so-called ex-militants and jobless youths, who have sold their birthrights for handouts, were again paid to declare that militancy ended in 2009.

    “As they continue to delude themselves, display their ignorance and irrelevance, the region, as can be seen by the world, is in turmoil. That can no longer be hidden.

    “We dare the so-called ex-Generals to come out from their hiding in Abuja into the creeks, to restore order.

    “The Niger Delta amnesty office in the presidency issued a contradictory statement that MEND only exists on cyberspace. This same office made a public appeal to MEND, to refrain from our threat to attack mosques in retaliation to Boko Haram’s attacks on churches.”

  • Pirates nab two U.S. sailors off Nigeria

    Pirates nab two U.S. sailors off Nigeria

    Two United States citizens were kidnapped from an oil supply vessel off the coast of Nigeria. The incident highlights piracy’s shift westward from East Africa – tighter security and the promise of new oil have made the continent’s western coast an increasing target for pirate attacks.

    The American captain and chief engineer of an oil platform supply ship have been kidnapped by pirates off the coast of Nigeria, news agencies reported yesterday.

    The Nigerian Navy said the incident took place off the coastal lines of Brass Island in Bayelsa State.

    The Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) in a statement last night by its Spokesman Jomo Gbomo, claimed responsibility for the abduction of the Americans.

    MEND said: “The Americans will not be handed over for our direct custody, but we will have the influence to visit them and ensure that they are well looked after, until their subsequent release.

    “This latest incident is to confirm to the world that accidents do not just happen, as the deceitful and corrupt government of President Goodluck Jonathan wants the world to believe.

    “Unresolved root issues, compounded by the continued detention of Henry Okah (one of MEND’s leaders, serving a jail term in South African prison); his brother, Charles Okah; and several others over false accusations, as well as a monumental Niger Delta amnesty fraud, can only make security and peace in the region an illusion.”

    The Director of Naval Information, Commodore Kabiru Aliyu, told reporters in Yenagoa, the state capital that the Navy had swung into action to rescue the Americans.

    “The Nigerian Navy has received a report on the attack of a U.S.-flagged vessel, C-RETRIEVER. Accordingly, the Nigerian Navy has directed its Operational Commands and the Operational Bases to search and rescue the crew members and the vessel,” Aliyu said.

    Some suspected pirates had on Wednesday shot and killed two soldiers in an ambush along the waterways in Ikuru community in Andoni Local Government Area of Rivers.

    Maritime industry website gCaptain first reported the incident, saying the “C-Retriever” supply ship, owned by Louisiana-based marine transport company Edison Chouest, was attacked by pirates near the city of Brass, in the Niger Delta, on Wednesday. Brass sits at the mouth of one of the many rivers and streams that empty into the Gulf of Guinea, forming the Delta, which is home to a number of large international oil platforms and regular industry ship traffic.

    A spokesman for the U.S. military’s Africa Command (AFRICOM) told CBS News they were aware of the reports, but would not comment further. The State Department also said it was “closely monitoring” the reports and was “seeking additional information about the incident.”

    Both the Associated Press and Reuters news agencies said U.S. defense officials confirmed the information.

    Rick Filon of AKE said the Naval Command has provided no additional information.

    The ship is owned by Edison Chouest Offshore, based in Cut Off, La. ECO supports the majority of the U.S. Gulf deepwater oil rigs and an expanding global market with a fleet of more than 200 vessels, ranging from 87 to over 360 feet in length, according to the company web site.

    Maj. Mark Firman, a Pentagon spokesman, described the incident as “a piracy attack on a commercial vessel off the coast of Nigeria.”

    “There is no involvement of DoD at this point,” Firman said. “It’s a maritime criminal act.”

    U.S. Navy SEALs rescued an American Capt. Richard Phillips off the coast of Somalia in 2009, when he was abducted by pirates who attacked his ship, the Maersk Alabama. But unlike the east coast of Africa there is no international counter-piracy mission off the coast of west Africa, Firman said.

    Piracy off Africa’s west coast has been a growing problem, however, according to maritime security experts.

    The C-Retriever is a supply vessel for oil platforms in the Gulf of Guinea and has been working in the area since about April 2006, said Daryl Williamson, commercial development director for Lloyds List Intelligence.

    Piracy in the area tends to target slow-moving, anchored vessels doing ship-to-ship operations, often in in-shore waters as opposed to the high seas, Williamson said.

    Cyrus Mody, assistant director of the International Maritime Bureau, said incidents off the coast of Nigeria have been growing “for a number of years,” though they’ve been overshadowed by piracy off the Somali coast and “hasn’t gotten the attention it deserves,” Mody said.

    Attacks have ranged from opportunistic and sometimes violent robberies aboard vessels to steal the ship’s cash or the crew’s personal belongings, to more sophisticated operations aimed at ships’ cargo.

    Those usually involve ships carrying refined products, gas or oil, that are hijacked for on average seven to 12 days. The cargo is transferred to another ship. The pirates then either release the ship and crew or take a number of crew hostage for ransom, Mody said.

    Such operations appear to be the work of well-organized crime syndicates, Mody said. In some cases, the pirates knew what they were doing in terms of how the cargo was kept and how things function on board a vessel, he said.

    Such hijackings require “buyers willing to take cargo, there has to be a degree of organisation on land as well as at sea,” he said.

    Not all the hijackings have occurred off the coast of Nigeria but they all have a connection to that West African country, he said.

    “It is something the countries (in the region) are looking at very carefully and closely and trying to implement measures,” he said.

    An American man from Georgia was kidnapped from the Niger Delta city of Warri last year. He was freed after a week in captivity, possibly for a large ransom, though the circumstances were not confirmed. There were five reports of U.S. nationals being kidnapped in Nigeria in 2011.

    Nigeria’s government earns billions of dollars a year from its resources in the oil-rich Delta, but is frequently accused of widespread corruption that keeps the vast majority of Nigerians from sharing in the wealth.

    The Delta region’s inhabitants remain impoverished, and for years small groups of bandits have attacked oil industry vessels, but the attacks have increased in recent years and become more dangerous, according to one industry worker who left the region last year.

    George Ezard, a British contract engineer who spent eight years working in Nigeria, told CBSNews.com the attacks on ships and platforms were even creeping west from the Delta toward Lagos, Nigeria’s sprawling economic capital.

    “Only one company would give us life insurance, but it wasn’t valid in the Delta,” recalled Ezard, who worked most recently in Lagos but was previously based in the Delta city of Port Harcourt.

    “Even in Lagos it (pirate attacks) was increasing,” he said. “It was really getting to be bad. He said the threat in the early years was “from small-time opportunists, then suddenly it became armed gangs who killed people and demanded ransoms.”

    The incident highlights piracy’s shift westward from East Africa – tighter security and the promise of new oil have made the continent’s western coast an increasing target for pirate attacks.

    Piracy has long flourished off Africa’s east coast, where lawlessness in Somalia has fueled attacks on large vessels carrying fuels and other goods. But the intervention of international naval forces is forcing pirates west, where a combination of looser security and increased oil production makes the region an appealing target.

    “There has been a worrying trend in the kidnapping of crew from vessels well outside the territorial limits of coastal states in the Gulf of Guinea,” said Pottengal Mukundan, director of the International Maritime Bureau (IMB), an arm of the International Chamber of Commerce, said in a July statement announcing the organisation’s global piracy report.

    “There continues to be significant under-reporting of attacks,” Mr. Mukundan said. “This prevents meaningful response by the authorities and endangers other vessels sailing into the area unaware of the precise nature of the threat.”

    East African attacks are down, following the global downward trend in piracy. Only 75 ships reported attacks off the coast of Somalia and in the Gulf of Aden in 2012, according to IMB. That’s down from 237 in 2011, a figure that accounted for a quarter of attacks worldwide. But West African attacks ticked up to 58 in 2012 from 33 in 2010. In the first half of 2013, IMB reported 31 incidents in the Gulf of Guinea.

    The attraction is Nigeria, which is Africa’s largest oil producer with a capacity of over 3 million barrels of oil per day. In 2011, Nigeria was the fourth-largest foreign oil supplier to the US. Theft and vandalism have hit onshore production hard in recent years, with the country losing $11 billion to crude oil theft and pipeline vandalism between 2009 and 2011. Citing instability in Nigeria, oil major Shell’s profit dropped to $4.6 billion in the second quarter 2013 from $5.7 billion a year earlier.

    Wednesday’s attack, along with other recent incidents suggests attacks are increasingly moving offshore. That trend has troubled West African leaders, who in June called for the establishment of an international naval force in the Gulf of Guinea to cut down on security threats. Naval ships from European Union, China and the US already patrol the waters off Somalia on Africa’s east coast.

    “The weakness – and sometimes general inadequacy – of maritime policies in Gulf of Guinea states, and the lack of cooperation between them have allowed criminal networks to diversify their activities and gradually extend them away from the coast and out on the high seas, from the Niger delta to Côte d’Ivoire”, Thierry Vircoulon, central Africa project director of International Crisis Group, last December said in a statement announcing the Brussels-based nonprofit’s report on the area.

  • MEND: why she was abducted

    MEND: why she was abducted

    The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) has said it made accidental contact with the kidnappers of Mrs. Douglas-Ayam.

    The militant group noted that the kidnappers wanted ransom and carried out the act to protest the use of helicopters at the funeral of Oronto’s father in Bayelsa State, during which the ex-National Security Adviser, Gen. Andrew Owoye Azazi and others died.

    MEND, yesterday in an online statement by its spokesman, Jomo Gbomo, said it would not get involved in the activities of the kidnappers.

    The militant group said: “The gang, in addition to seeking ransom, wants to use the kidnap to express its disgust due to the ostentation they witnessed during the funeral of Pa Douglas, which included the abuse of military helicopters, which were used as a social shuttle service to ferry guests, when such could have been put to better use.

    “As we do not wish to be dragged into playing the role of an intermediary with kidnapers, we have declined their request to get involved, based on principles.”

    MEND also said it pleaded with the kidnappers to release the victim, who it said was last seen looking well, but harassed and unharmed.

  • MEND leader John Togo for burial 2 years after death

    MEND leader John Togo for burial 2 years after death

    The Defence Headquarters has given the go-ahead for the burial of a notorious sea piracy kingpin and leader of the Niger Delta Liberation Force (NDLF), John Togo, over two years after he was killed in a clash with troops of the Joint Task Force (JTF) in Bomadi Local Government Area of Delta State.

    The Nation reliably gathered that the JTF has received the approval to release the body of the crime lord to relevant authority for burial.

    Sources said the delay in burying the scar-face militant, who was a factional leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), was due to the Federal Government’s directives that a DNA test be carried out on his decomposing remains.

    Togo was killed in an aerial assault by the Airforce arm of the JTF in May 2011 after a five-month stand-off between his ragtag army and troops of the JTF.

    He died after he renounced the Amnesty Programme of the Federal Government in November 2010, took up arms and went back to the trenches with a handful of his fellow NDLF members.

    He triggered a furious manhunt when he ambushed and killed about six soldiers of a JTF team near Ayakoromo in November 2010; the incident led to the invasion of the community and burning down of about 50 houses in the Ijaw community.

    Thereafter, the JTF intensified manhunt for him and his boys, who were encamped at the ‘Israel Camp’ of the group in an isolated boundary area between Bayelsa and Delta states.

    He was killed after months of bloody clashes and his gang members buried his remains in a shallow grave before fleeing the scene.

    His body was later exhumed when the JTF sent in ground troops, who arrested one of the fleeing militants who led them to his burial site.

    The remains could not be buried due to the military’s insistence that a DNA must be conducted to properly identify his body before the manhunt launched for him would be officially called off.

    The DNA test, which confirmed the remains as that of Togo, was carried out leading to the recent approval given for his burial.

    A top official of the JTF in Effurun Barracks, Capt. Mohammed Abdulahi, was contacted by our reporter, confirmed the report.

    He said: “It is true that approval has been given for the burial of Togo, but it is not the task of the JTF to bury him, the body will be released to the Police.”

    A source at the JTF’s headquarters, Yenagoa said the approval came last Wednesday.