Nigerian offshore attacks surge as pirates advance

Updated 22 February 2013
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Nigerian offshore attacks surge as pirates advance

ABUJA/LONDON: A spike in piracy off Nigeria’s oil-rich coast has shown gangs are willing to venture further afield and use more violent tactics, increasing the risk of doing business in Africa’s largest energy producer.
Pirates demanded a 200 million naira ($ 1.3 million) ransom for the release of six foreigners kidnapped on Sunday, the latest in at least five attacks in Nigerian waters this month. Exxon Mobil and Shell officials said this week that security was a major factor in Nigeria, and it was one of the most expensive oil-producing countries to operate in.
“The recent upsurge in maritime kidnaps off the Niger Delta ... has not been witnessed since 2010,” said Tom Patterson, maritime risk analyst at Control Risks.
“It is easy to underestimate the debilitating effect such a situation can have, even on larger corporations,” Patterson added.
Oil and shipping companies have to hire crisis management teams, pay huge insurance premiums and face the prospect of ransom payments, as well as brace themselves for damage to their reputations.
At the same time, pirates are becoming more ambitious.
Three crew members were kidnapped on Feb. 7 from the British-flagged cargo ship Esther C around 80 miles offshore, the furthest pirates have reached in the Gulf of Guinea.
A Filipino crew member was killed when gunmen attacked a chemical tanker three days earlier, in the first confirmed case in Nigerian waters of crew killed on a vessel that deployed a private armed team, security firm AKE said.

“The main problem with the increase in West African piracy is the consequences to the crews,” said Jakob Larsen, maritime security officer with BIMCO, the world’s largest private ship owners’ association.
“Given the more violent nature of the pirate attacks off West Africa, there is every reason to exercise caution when deciding whether to use armed guards or not.”
The prime suspects for most attacks are Nigerian oil gangs, who already carry out industrial scale crude theft, called ‘bunkering’ in the restive onshore Niger Delta swamplands.
Nigeria’s oil minister said this week that oil theft, which can amount to 150,000 barrels per day (bpd), was the work of an international criminal syndicate. President Goodluck Jonathan has asked Britain for help.
Security experts also believe Nigerian security officials and politicians are complicit in oil theft and piracy.
“There are many top people in Nigeria involved in commissioning these attacks and sharing the profits,” said Michael Frodl, head of US consultancy C-Level Maritime Risks.
“It’s obvious to us that they’ve been bringing in people in other nations into the game, and sharing a cut in exchange for tips for tankers and cargoes.”
Compounding the problem, there is less fuel available in Nigeria since Jonathan reduced subsidies last year, which has forced prices to rise. This has provided an added incentive for gangs to locally refine stolen oil or siphon fuel off ships they attack, experts say.
“Piracy off Nigeria and West Africa is really much more an extension of the ‘bunkering’ that’s endemic on shore, and we think that as oil prices continue to rise, the potential for making bigger profits by reselling stolen oil will only further accelerate attacks and hijackings,” C-Level’s Frodl said.
“There is a sense that security resources are being focused to combat the terrorist threat in the north of the country,” said Rory Lamrock, intelligence analyst with AKE.
“We’re likely to see further attacks over the coming months as local authorities are unable to effectively police the waters, especially up to 50 or 60 nautical miles off the coast.”


Russia investigates care home deaths in new Siberian health scandal

Updated 7 sec ago
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Russia investigates care home deaths in new Siberian health scandal

  • The state Investigative Committee said professional lapses by staff had contributed to a mass outbreak of a viral infection that led to 46 people being hospitalized
  • At least three people died as a result of the illness and six other deaths were under investigation

MOSCOW: A criminal investigation into patient deaths at a neuropsychiatric care home in Siberia has found that staff failed in their duties, Russian authorities said on Thursday, in the second health scandal to hit the region this month.
The state Investigative Committee, which probes serious crimes, said professional lapses by staff had contributed to a mass outbreak of a viral infection that led to 46 people being hospitalized. At least three people died as a result of the illness and six other deaths were under investigation.
The care home is just outside the city of Novokuznetsk, where ⁠the deaths of nine newborn babies in the space of nine days shortly after the New Year sparked outrage across Russia and spurred a criminal investigation into negligence.
In the latest case, the Investigative Committee said staff were being questioned, medical records had been seized and forensic tests were under way to determine the cause ⁠of the infection’s spread.
The investigation is into “sanitary violations resulting in the deaths of patients.”
The regional health ministry said earlier this month it had detected 46 cases of influenza type A among a sample of 128 residents of the care home, while two more people tested positive for pneumonia.
Those who died included a 21-year-old woman with cerebral palsy and a 19-year-old man, according to regional authorities.
Ilya Seredyuk, governor of the Kuzbass region of Siberia, called the news was devastating, and said a commission formed by the ⁠regional government had been working on site since January 24.
“Materials requiring review have been sent to law enforcement agencies,” he said.
Kuzbass is a heavily industrial region of about 2.6 million people that accounts for much of Russia’s coal production.
Average life expectancy there in 2023 was about 70.2 years, well below the national average of 73.1 and compared with an average of 81.5 in the European Union.
Official data released this month shows deaths from respiratory diseases among working-age people in Kuzbass rose between 2022 and 2024, while overall mortality rates were higher and fertility rates lower than federal averages.