Port Harcourt (Nigeria) (AFP) -
The sister of Nigeria's powerful petroleum minister has been kidnapped
in the oil hub of Port Harcourt, police said Friday, in the latest
abduction targeting a prominent political family.
Osio Agama,
whose sister Diezani Alison-Madueke leads Africa's largest oil industry,
was seized at gunpoint as she approached her car on Tuesday night,
Rivers state police spokesman Ahmad Muhammad said.
Muhammad
said police "were not aware if any ransom demand had been made" and the
motive for the abduction was unknown but the southern oil-producing
Niger Delta region has seen waves of ransom kidnappings in recent years.
One
of the most prominent cases came in December 2012, when Finance
Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala's 82-year-old mother Kamene Okonjo was
abducted from her home, in neighbouring Delta state.
Okonjo-Iweala and Alison-Madueke are widely seen as the two most powerful members of President Goodluck Jonathan's cabinet.
Jonathan's 70-year-old uncle was also kidnapped earlier this year in Bayelsa state, also in the Niger Delta.
Some have sought to attach a political motive to attacks targeting Nigeria's most powerful families.
The
finance minister implied that her mother was seized because of her
ministry's crackdown on oil companies which had abused the country's
rotten fuel subsidy scheme.
But such links were never proven and Kamene Okonjo was released a week after her abduction.
The
security forces and affected families almost never confirm ransom
payments but most believe kidnappers in the Niger Delta are seeking
financial gain.
Despite producing roughly two million barrels of oil per day, the area remains acutely poor with high unemployment.
Gang activity is rampant and kidnappings have at times been perpetrated on a near weekly basis.
Local politicians, prominent businessmen and foreigners have been among the targets.
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