LAGOS, June 7 (Xinhua) -- Five Koreans believed to be
staff of Daewoo Company, South Korea, were kidnapped at 0010 on Wednesday (2310
GMT on Tuesday) in Cawthorne Channel, Nigeria's southern state of Rivers.
Jomo Gbomo, a self-described spokesman for the
Movement of Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), said the fighters of the
MEND "attacked the premises of the Daewoo Company, contractors to Shell ... in
response to the court of appeal judgment of Tuesday June 6, 2006, on the
continued detention of Asari."
According to him, the five Koreans held hostages are
staff of Daewoo who gave their names as: H.J. Kwon, A. Park, S.B. Kim, O.K.Kim,
and H.D. Kim.
"They are in good health and have been returned to
one of our bases," he said.
Gbomo explained that the action contradicted their
earlier resolve not to take hostages, but "the court ruling of June 6, stripping
Asari (Mujaheed Asari-Dokubo) of his rights as a human being and citizen of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria effectively puts Nigeria under martial law."
The Court of Appeal in the capital Abuja on Tuesday
shattered the hope of Alhaji Mujaheed Asari-Dokubo, leader of a rebel group the
Niger Delta People's Volunteer Force, for freedom as it dismissed his prayer for
bail.
The court held that his admission to bail would pose
a threat to national security in view of documentary evidence before it.
The MEND spokesman explained that "we are of the
opinion that the government may be interested more in a prisoner exchange rather
than releasing the persons who release we have demanded."
He added that they also advised the Daewoo Company to
close down its operations with immediate effect as "a second attack will bring
only death."
He said similarly oil service companies in the Niger
Delta which have been clamoring for contracts on the repair of pipelines we
previously destroyed should rethink this foolishness.
"Workers for such daring companies will be executed
if caught at those sites," he said.
Attacks would increase with frequency with the
destruction of several facilities of crucial importance to the oil industry in
the next few weeks, he warned, but promised that they would not kill those
captured.
He warned oil companies in the Niger Delta again to
leave the Niger Delta.
During the attack, the MEND spokesman said, they
exchanged fire with a military houseboat used by Nigerian soldiers and mobile
policemen drafted for the security of the Daewoo Company.
Some occupants of this houseboat were killed in the
fierce firefight, some others jumped overboard and the rest fled into the
surrounding bushes. The houseboat was burnt.
In the ensuing fight, one of the army boats was
destroyed and sunk with all six soldiers in the boat killed.
He admitted that they lost one fighter in the
operation with two injured. Enditem