The kidnapped mother
of the Nigerian finance minister has been freed, Nigerian officials
said Friday, ending the search five days after the elderly retiree was
seized outside her home in Delta state.
“The Okonjo family is full of thanks to the Almighty for this happy
development,” Paul Nwabuikwu, an adviser to Finance Minister Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, said in a Friday statement.
Few details were available about how Kamene Okonjo was returned.
Nigerian police could not be reached by phone and did not immediately
respond to an email from The Times seeking comment. A police spokesman
told Nigerian radio that Okonjo was in good health.
While kidnappings are a
frequent menace in the region, the seizure gained international
attention because of its target. Okonjo-Iweala is a respected economist
who was recently a candidate to lead the World Bank.
The finance minister has campaigned against corruption and recently
halted payments to fuel importers to try to better confirm their claims
for gasoline subsidies -- a popular program she once tried to stop.
Recent threats against the finance minister spurred questions of
whether the kidnappers had a political bent or were simply seeking a
financial ransom, a frequent driver of such crimes in Delta. Before her
return, police reportedly had arrested 63 people in massive raids
searching for Okonjo.
Delta Gov. Emmanuel Uduaghan told the BBC that the kidnappers likely freed Okonjo because of the intense pressure.
"The army and police have been on their trail and a lot of raids have
been done," he said. "I think because of the heat they dropped her off
on the highway."
The crime drew renewed attention to the ongoing scourge of kidnapping
in the southern Nigerian state, where police have been suspected of
abetting the crime. Bloomberg reported that two police officers had been
detained for alleged negligence in the Sunday abduction.
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