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LAGOS, March 27 (Xinhua) -- Three Western oil
workers, including two Americans and a Briton, held in Nigeria's troubled
oil-rich Niger Delta by militants for more than one month, have been released, a
state government spokesman said on Monday.
"They were be released to the state government at
about 3:20 a.m. (0220 GMT) this morning," the Delta State spokesman told Xinhua
by telephone. "They are all in good health and with (Royal Dutch) Shell
officials, their employer."
He said the government had assured the Ijaw militants
belonging to Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) that they
would not be attacked by the Nigerian army after the release.
The MEND is not immediately available for comments.
The three hostages were seized along with six others
on February 18 from a vessel laying a pipeline for by the militants in
retaliation for military bombardment of their strongholds on the ground of
rooting out oil thieves. The six others, however, were later released.
Originally, the militants are insisting on the
demilitarization of the delta as a condition for the release. They also vowed
not to compromise on its demands for the release of two ethnic Ijaw leaders,
payment of 1.5-billion-U.S. dollar compensation to Ijaw communities affected by
Shell spillages.
Nigeria's oil output has been cut by about 630,000
barrels per day, or a quarter, after four-month attacks on oil facilities by the
militants led by the MEND in the Niger Delta, the oil industry heartland in
Africa's biggest oil exporter. Enditem |