Fuel pipe leak disrupts flights at Auckland airport

This file photo taken on December 5, 2003 shows an Air New Zealand Boeing 737 sitting at a departure gate while an Australian Qantas Boeing 747-400 takes-off from Auckland Airport in Auckland. (AFP)
Updated 18 September 2017
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Fuel pipe leak disrupts flights at Auckland airport

WELLINGTON, New Zealand: A rupture in the main pipeline carrying jet fuel to New Zealand’s largest airport has disrupted the travel plans of thousands of people and is expected to cause further flight cancelations and delays through next week.
Auckland Airport spokeswoman Lisa Mulitalo said Monday that 41 international and domestic flights have been canceled since Saturday due to low jet fuel supplies.
Air New Zealand says fuel supplies are just 30 percent of normal levels at the airport and 2,000 of its customers will be affected Monday alone.
The underground pipeline runs about 170 kilometers (106 miles) from an oil refinery to Auckland. Pipeline owners Refining New Zealand say a digger or other machinery appears to have damaged the pipe and then acidic soil has corroded it further until it failed Thursday.


Nigerian gunmen free kidnapped Muslim religious travelers

Nigerian Police officers are seen in Lagos. (AFP file photo)
Updated 4 sec ago
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Nigerian gunmen free kidnapped Muslim religious travelers

  • Kidnappings for ransom are common in the west African country

JOS, Nigeria: Gunmen have released a group of people they kidnapped in central Nigeria who were traveling for a Muslim religious event, the brother of one of the victims told AFP Saturday.
On December 21, unidentified attackers abducted 28 people, including women and children, in Plateau state while they were traveling to a Malud gathering to mark the birth of the Prophet Muhammad.
Kidnappings for ransom are common in the west African country. But the abduction in Plateau state came after a spate of mass kidnappings in November that drew international scrutiny over the country’s grim security situation.
“Yesterday at night, an official of the State Security Service called and told us that our people have been rescued,” said Ibrahim Musa, a brother of one of the victims.
Musa told AFP he and others “are eagerly waiting to receive our people” once they’re handed over by security forces to their families.
The Plateau abduction occurred on the same day authorities secured the release of 130 schoolchildren — the last batch of more than 250 snatched from their Catholic boarding school in north-central Niger state.
It was unclear how the Plateau travelers were freed. Paying ransoms is technically illegal in Nigeria, though the government is often suspected of doing so.
Neither the police nor the State Security Service — also known as the Department of State Services (DSS) — immediately responded to a request for comment.
US President Donald Trump has latched onto the insecurity in Nigeria, focusing on the killing of Christians and putting Abuja under diplomatic pressure.
In late December the US launched strikes on what it and the Nigerian government said were militants linked to the Daesh group.
Nigeria’s myriad armed conflicts kill people across religious lines, and some experts have warned Trump’s focus on Christian victims may inflame communal tensions.