By Nick Tattersall
LAGOS, March 14 (Reuters) - Gunmen attacked an oil supply vessel contracted to Royal Dutch Shell off Cameroon near the border with Nigeria on Saturday, kidnapping one Ukrainian and three Filipino crew, security sources said.
Two security contractors said some 30 suspected Nigerian militants in speedboats attacked the MV Sil Tide in the early hours of Saturday morning around 14 km (9 miles) from the coast of Bakassi, on the Nigeria-Cameroon border.
'Around five shots were fired. One person was injured and they got the three Filipinos and the Ukrainian,' one of the security sources, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
Both sources said the attack happened in Cameroonian waters. One said the vessel was under Cameroonian naval escort.
A spokesman for Shell said the vessel was operated by oil services company Tidewater and was under contract to Pecten Cameroon, a joint venture in which Shell owns 80 percent and Cameroon's state oil company owns the rest.
'It was attacked early this morning offshore Cameroon in an area where it usually operates. Four people were abducted,' Shell spokesman Olav Ljosne said. He gave no further details.
The Cameroonian navy could not be reached for comment. Spokesmen for the Nigerian navy and for the military taskforce patrolling Nigeria's oil-producing Niger Delta said they had no immediate details.
Attacks on oil vessels are common off the Niger Delta, home to Africa's biggest oil and gas industry. More than 200 foreigners have been kidnapped in the delta over the past three years, most were released unharmed after a ransom payment.
But gunmen and pirates in fast launches have increasingly struck beyond Nigerian waters, attacking oil installations, fishing boats, banks and even coastal towns around the Gulf of Guinea -- a region which is the main source of African crude oil exported to the West and to China.
Cameroon, Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea and Benin have all seen such attacks in recent years.
Gunmen in motor boats attacked the presidential palace in Equatorial Guinea's island capital Malabo last month. The government said it believed the attackers came from Nigeria.
The Bakassi peninsula near where the four foreigners were taken on Saturday has long been a centre of unrest.
Bakassi was handed over to Cameroon by Nigeria last year after a decades-long border dispute. Many Nigerian residents opposed the handover and militia groups, believed to be linked to the well-armed gangs of the Niger Delta, sprung up.
Two allied militia groups from Bakassi seized 10 mostly French crew members from a vessel operated by oil services firm Bourbon off Cameroon last October. The hostages were released unharmed around 10 days later.
(For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://af.reuters.com/ )
(Additional reporting by Tansa Musa in Yaounde and Austin Ekeinde in Port Harcourt; Editing by Katie Nguyen) Keywords: CAMEROON NIGERIA/KIDNAPPING (Reuters messaging: nicholas.tattersall.reuters.com@reuters.net, Lagos Newsroom +234 1 463 0257) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.
LAGOS, March 14 (Reuters) - Gunmen attacked an oil supply vessel contracted to Royal Dutch Shell off Cameroon near the border with Nigeria on Saturday, kidnapping one Ukrainian and three Filipino crew, security sources said.
Two security contractors said some 30 suspected Nigerian militants in speedboats attacked the MV Sil Tide in the early hours of Saturday morning around 14 km (9 miles) from the coast of Bakassi, on the Nigeria-Cameroon border.
'Around five shots were fired. One person was injured and they got the three Filipinos and the Ukrainian,' one of the security sources, who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
Both sources said the attack happened in Cameroonian waters. One said the vessel was under Cameroonian naval escort.
A spokesman for Shell said the vessel was operated by oil services company Tidewater and was under contract to Pecten Cameroon, a joint venture in which Shell owns 80 percent and Cameroon's state oil company owns the rest.
'It was attacked early this morning offshore Cameroon in an area where it usually operates. Four people were abducted,' Shell spokesman Olav Ljosne said. He gave no further details.
The Cameroonian navy could not be reached for comment. Spokesmen for the Nigerian navy and for the military taskforce patrolling Nigeria's oil-producing Niger Delta said they had no immediate details.
Attacks on oil vessels are common off the Niger Delta, home to Africa's biggest oil and gas industry. More than 200 foreigners have been kidnapped in the delta over the past three years, most were released unharmed after a ransom payment.
But gunmen and pirates in fast launches have increasingly struck beyond Nigerian waters, attacking oil installations, fishing boats, banks and even coastal towns around the Gulf of Guinea -- a region which is the main source of African crude oil exported to the West and to China.
Cameroon, Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea and Benin have all seen such attacks in recent years.
Gunmen in motor boats attacked the presidential palace in Equatorial Guinea's island capital Malabo last month. The government said it believed the attackers came from Nigeria.
The Bakassi peninsula near where the four foreigners were taken on Saturday has long been a centre of unrest.
Bakassi was handed over to Cameroon by Nigeria last year after a decades-long border dispute. Many Nigerian residents opposed the handover and militia groups, believed to be linked to the well-armed gangs of the Niger Delta, sprung up.
Two allied militia groups from Bakassi seized 10 mostly French crew members from a vessel operated by oil services firm Bourbon off Cameroon last October. The hostages were released unharmed around 10 days later.
(For full Reuters Africa coverage and to have your say on the top issues, visit: http://af.reuters.com/ )
(Additional reporting by Tansa Musa in Yaounde and Austin Ekeinde in Port Harcourt; Editing by Katie Nguyen) Keywords: CAMEROON NIGERIA/KIDNAPPING (Reuters messaging: nicholas.tattersall.reuters.com@reuters.net, Lagos Newsroom +234 1 463 0257) COPYRIGHT Copyright Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved. The copying, republication or redistribution of Reuters News Content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters.