Gunmen kill local driver and abduct seven men working for Australian mining giant Macmahon near Calabar.
Gunmen
in southern Nigeria have killed a local driver and kidnapped two
Nigerians, three Australians, a New Zealander and a South African
working for an Australian mining company, officials said.
The abduction happened in the Akpabuyo district near the capital of
Cross River state, Calabar, at about 7am on Wednesday, Nigerian police
said on Thursday.
Those taken were believed to be workers with Australian mining and
engineering giant Macmahon, which was contracted to cement company
LafargeHolcim in the state, police commissioner Jimoh Ozi-Obeh told
reporters.
"The police is currently working with the Nigerian Navy to ensure that the victims are released unharmed," he added.
Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said they are working with Nigerian authorities to free their citizens.
"We are working with the authorities, local authorities, at the highest levels," Turnbull told reporters in Geelong, Australia.
"We don't know at this stage the identity of the kidnappers and families in Australia are notified, of course.
"It is a very serious kidnapping, a very serious criminal assault, one person was killed and seven people have been kidnapped."
Irene Ugbo, a spokeswoman for Cross River state police, said no ransom demand had been received.
One witness to the abduction, who asked not to be identified, said the kidnappers took the men to a waiting boat.
LafargeHolcim spokeswoman Viola Graham-Douglas said the company was
informed of the incident by Macmahon, which was "working with the
security agencies to resolve the situation".
Macmahon has an $18m a year contract with the United Cement Company
of Nigeria Ltd (UniCem) for quarrying operations at UniCem's cement
manufacturing plant at Mfamosing, near Calabar.
UniCem is a joint venture between Franco-Swiss conglomerate
LafargeHolcim and Flour Mills of Nigeria, according to the Australian
firm's website.
Kidnapping for ransom has been a long-standing problem in southern
Nigeria, particularly in the oil-producing delta region, where criminal
gangs target wealthy Nigerians and expatriate workers.
Most are usually released after the payment of a ransom.
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