Arab Times

Nigeria taking action as piracy and clashes on rise

Six Turkish sailors abducted off Nigeria freed

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Nigeria needs to step up security to stem a rise in incidents of piracy and communal clashes, as well as the continued threat from Boko Haram insurgents, Defence Minister Mansur Muhammad Dan-Ali said Tuesday.

The minister, who is also a retired brigadier general, told a government-sponsored seminar that “all security agencies in Nigeria have been called upon to crush and deter the threats.”

A statement reporting his comments said there would be continued support for all agencies, particular­ly those battling the Boko Haram insurgency in the country’s northeast, which has claimed about 20,000 lives since 2009.

Ship hijackings meanwhile have become more frequent since President Muhammadu Buhari last year announced he was winding down an amnesty to former militants in the oil-rich Niger delta region.

Dirk Steffen, maritime security director at the Denmarkbas­ed Risk Intelligen­ce firm, told AFP on Tuesday that some 40 vessels have been attacked by pirates inside and outside Nigerian territoria­l waters since the beginning of this year.

Clashes over grazing too have multiplied, with the latest attack on Monday by gunmen believed to be ethnic Fulani killing at least seven people in a farming community in southeast Enugu state, police said on Tuesday.

Local media however put the death toll at between 20 and 48 with scores of homes destroyed. Nigeria’s police chief Solomon Arase said riot troops have been deployed to the affected Agatu area to restore peace.

In February, hundreds of people were reportedly killed in clashes between mostly Muslim Fulani herders and predominan­tly Christian farmers in Agatu district of Benue state.

Meanwhile, six Turkish members of a cargo ship’s crew who were kidnapped by pirates off the coast of Nigeria two weeks ago have been released and are safely back in Istanbul, a lawyer for the shipping company said on Tuesday.

“The six of them have been released and are back in Istanbul. All are in good health,” said Fehmi Ulgener, a lawyer for the shipping firm Kaptanoglu Denizcilik. He declined to say whether or not a ransom had been paid.

The Turks, who included the M/T Puli’s captain, chief officer and chief engineer, were abducted some 90 miles off Nigeria on April 11. Other members of the crew were left onboard, unharmed.

The tanker was carrying liquid chemical fuels and was travelling to Cameroon, the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet reported.

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