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Oil Workers Reportedly Freed in Nigeria

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From Associated Press

Militant youths Friday freed 165 oil workers, including seven Americans, after holding them several days on two Shell Oil Co. rigs, company officials said.

The youths vacated the two flow stations in the southeastern state of Bayelsa about 5 p.m., a Shell official said on condition of anonymity.

An agreement was reached Wednesday with representatives of the youths to free the hostages the next day. But the representatives didn’t make it back to the rigs, in a remote part of the Niger River Delta, until Friday to order the releases, the official said.

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The hostages, who included 13 other foreigners along with the Americans, had been held since Monday, when about 50 armed youths invaded the two flow stations.

Shell refused the youths’ demands for jobs as security personnel and catering staff and for a $5,000 ransom, but officials agreed to meet the youths’ representatives Aug. 15 to address their grievances, said Shell spokesman Bisi Ojeideran.

Protesters regularly sabotage pipeline installations and take hostages from oil companies to call attention to the lack of development and abject living conditions in the Niger Delta, where most of the country’s oil is drilled.

Although Nigeria is the world’s sixth-largest oil producer, many residents of the delta live without paved roads, electricity or running water.

In recent years, oil companies have begun large-scale aid programs in the region, supplying millions of dollars for facilities such as schools and clinics.

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