Armed pirates stormed a U.S. flagged ship off the coast of Nigeria early
Wednesday morning, kidnapping the American Captain and Chief Engineer,
U.S. officials confirmed to ABC News.
The men are now on land, according to a Defense Department official, and
the FBI in New York, which deals with Africa cases, is handling the
investigation. A U.S. government official briefed on the situation said
the American government is treating the case as a potential
kidnapping-for-ransom and not a politically-motivated act.
The Americans were taken off the U.S.-flagged C-Retriever, a 222-foot
vessel owned by U.S. marine transport group Edison Chouest Offshore that
is an oil supply vessel.
The kidnapping was first reported by gCaptain.com, a maritime industry news website.
While globally piracy was down last year to its lowest levels in seven
years, cases in Nigeria are on the rise. According to the International
Maritime Bureau, pirate attacks off Nigeria's coast have jumped by a
third this year -- allegedly perpetrated by criminal gangs who are
looking for cargo ships with commodities, and seeking ransom for
hostages.
Kidnapping for ransom has been a growing issue in Nigeria for several
years. In 2006 ABC News interviewed an American, Texas Richards, who had
been kidnapped by Nigerians and free
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