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Rebels abduct four French nationals in Niger

by Staff Writers
Lagos (AFP) June 22, 2008
Tuareg rebels abducted four French nationals working for nuclear group Areva in the uranium-rich north of Niger and said Sunday they would be freed quickly "with a message for the Areva management".

The four were seized in the northwest African country by an ethnic Tuareg rebel group, the Movement of the People of Niger for Justice (MNJ), said an Areva spokesman.

Jacques-Emmanuel Saulnier said three men and one woman had been abducted in the northern region of Niger where Areva has mining contracts, but were "safe and well."

The group, including the group's local operations director and a geologist, "were able to enter into contact with their colleagues," Saulnier added.

Speaking for the MNJ rebel group, Agali Alambo told AFP by telephone Sunday that the four French workers would be freed quickly -- "perhaps this evening" -- and without any demands but "with a message for the Areva management."

He suggested the MNJ was already in dialogue with the international Red Cross and the French embassy in Niamey, "but not with the Niger authorities," he added.

"We want to pass on the message to the (Niger) government that it's impossible to do anything concerning prospection and exploitation (of minerals) before problems are resolved in the north of the country," he said.

The MNJ has carried out a string of attacks in the north of Niger in recent months in a campaign to seek greater benefits from uranium extraction for the region's inhabitants.

The group is dismissed by Niamey as "bandits" and "drug-dealers" and is a splinter faction of Niger's main Tuareg groups, which signed a 1995 agreement with the government to end a first Tuareg rebellion.

Alambo specified that the French nationals were taken "without a single gunshot being fired and in the centre of the town of Arlit (Niger's uranium capital) while they were out jogging."

He said the MNJ "has nothing against Areva, nor against any other foreign company."

Active since February 2007 in the barren but uranium-rich north, the MNJ says peace will not return to the region without better integration of Tuaregs into the army, paramilitary corps and the local mining sector.

In an interview published in February, the MNJ's Rhissa Ag Boula said uranium mines operated by Areva and convoys serving them would be targeted again.

Areva responded by declaring itself "nobody's enemy" and a company that "values the stability of the country."

The following month, gunmen killed one civilian and wounded another in an attack on a lorry used for transporting uranium from north Niger to a port in Benin.

In April 2007, MNJ rebels had attacked Areva's biggest uranium project at Imouraren.

It also attacked a China Nuclear Engineering and Construction Corporation site in July 2007, with the Chinese group ultimately evacuating one prospective mine.

Areva, which claims to be the world's second largest uranium producer, is the largest private employer in Niger and the world's largest civil nuclear energy group.

Active in the country for 40 years, Areva sealed a mining rights and price-fixing partnership with Niger in January.

The Areva group is "totally mobilised in liaison with the Niger and French authorities for the release" of the French nationals, the company spokesman said Sunday.

Niger is the world's third largest uranium producing country.

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Workers Go On Strike In Azeri Oil Industry Over Low Wages
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The philosopher George Santayana famously observed that those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it. The aphorism should serve as a stark warning to the bureaucrats of the former Soviet Union, where rising labor unrest in 1917 overthrew a 300-year-old monarchy and ushered in 74 years of the most brutal social engineering the world has ever seen. Unfortunately, some businessmen in Azerbaijan seem to suffer from historical amnesia.







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