Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
Voice of America is funded by the US Federal Government and content it
exclusively produces is in the public domain.

Militants Attack Nigerian Oil Facility
--------------------------------------

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=128230F:3919ACA Attackers destroy
oil rig, naval houseboat, military gunship and kill five soldiers
before kidnapping five South Korean oil workers A militant group in
the Niger Delta Wednesday staged a bloody raid on an oil facility
seizing five South Korean oil workers and killing four soldiers.







Militants wearing black masks, military fatigues and carrying
Kalashnikov assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers
patrol the creeks of Niger Delta area of Nigeria (file photo)The
ethnic Ijaw militant group, Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger
Delta (MEND) has claimed responsibility for Wednesdays attack. The
attackers destroyed an oil rig, a naval houseboat, a military gunship
and killed five soldiers before kidnapping five South Korean oil
workers. The group's key demand is the release of a jailed militia
leader, Mujahid Dokubo-Asari. Some ethnic Ijaw leaders have denounced
the latest attack, which came at a time the government has launched an
initiative to address long-standing grievances in the region. Oboko
Bello is the president of the Federated Ijaw Council, one of the Niger
Delta groups involved in the government program. "I'm not denouncing
our struggle, our struggle is in place, but there is an
attempt….whether they want to solve the problem or not, they are
saying they want to solve the problem," he said.  "Give them a chance,
when they fail to meet the demand then we will say, look at the demand
and look at the offer.  The offer cannot be commensurate with what we
have placed before you.  The whole world would be watching."  The
attack came hours after the jailed militia leader, Dokubo-Asari, who
is on trial for treason was denied bail by a Nigerian court. Bello
says the judicial process should be allowed to determine
Dokubo-Asari's fate.

"When the thing is an issue of law court, I don't want to conduct
myself prejudicial to the process," he added.  "A lot of these things
are now issues of the law court. There should be an element of
legitimacy in what we are doing. There should be a rule of law."

Since February, MEND has carried out a number of attacks on the oil
industry in the delta, forcing the closure of a quarter of Nigeria's
oil output. The group insists on the release of Dukubo-Asari as one of
several conditions for ending the violence. On Friday, a group of
unidentified militants who were demanding jobs and development
projects kidnapped eight foreign oil workers from an oil platform off
Nigeria's southeastern coast. They were released on Sunday.