11 kidnapped as Gunmen ambush commercial bus in Rivers,
Gunmen abducted 11 people from a bus as they travelled close to Port
Harcourt, the capital of Rivers State, on Monday a passenger who escaped from
the attack told AFP.
The
region near Port Harcourt is a known hotspot for kidnappings by groups looking
to receive ransom payoffs and was the scene of an abduction that saw 16 people
snatched earlier this month.
“They
ambushed us at about 9.00 pm… and after asking us to come out from the bus,
they tried to take us inside the bush. But five of us escaped before police and
military personnel arrived,” said Amiekro Princewill.
Security
forces searched the area following the attack, according to another passenger
who managed to escape the gunmen.
“They had gone far into the forest with the victims before the security
operatives arrived,” said the escapee, Bright Belekwe.
“Hoodlums
ambushed us and tried to take us inside the bush. I and four others escaped
before police personnel arrived at the scene.”
The
kidnapping is the third such incident in just two months.
Regional police commissioner Ahmed Zaki confirmed the kidnapping at a
press conference at force headquarters in Port Harcourt, adding that efforts to
locate the victims were ongoing.
“The
incident is quite unfortunate and the police are on top of the situation in
ensuring that the hoodlums are arrested and brought to book,” he said.
Kidnapping
for ransom used to be confined to Nigeria’s oil-rich south, where criminal
gangs would typically target expatriate workers.
But
the practice has spread across the country as the economy has faltered with
Control Risks consultancy warning that the phenomenon has become “entrenched”
nationwide.
Nnamdi
Obasi, a senior Nigeria researcher at the International Crisis Group, said
poverty had made “anybody” a target and had led to a rise in “spontaneous”
kidnappings.
Most
victims are usually released unhurt after ransom money is paid.
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