Friday, July 20, 2012
Freed Italian, Spanish hostages head home
By Mathieu Bonkoungou
OUAGADOUGOU (Reuters) - One Italian and two Spanish hostages freed by kidnappers linked to al Qaeda in Mali headed home on Thursday after an accord which mediators said involved a prisoner swap.
The three aid workers, captured in Algeria last October, were flown home to Europe from the Burkina Faso capital Ouagadougou.
The Burkina officer who headed the operation said two Islamists in jail in Mauritania had been released as part of a deal with Mali's MUJWA, the al Qaeda splinter group which had been holding the hostages.
"I am well, and I hope to continue working in international cooperation," Italian Rossella Urru said as she was welcomed at Rome airport by elated family members, Prime Minister Mario Monti and Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi.
"This will not stop me."
Urru said she had been treated well and thanked the Italian government for its efforts to secure her release.
"Welcome back to Italy. Never has a welcome been given with such warmth and joy," Monti told the former hostage.
Spaniards Enric Gonyalons and Ainhoa Fernandez were flown to Spain on a separate flight.
"It was a release in exchange for a release," said General Gilbert Diendere, the officer who led the mission, adding that one of two Islamists freed in Mauritania had already been transferred to Mali.
He did not name the Islamists but Mauritanian media and an Islamist prisoner there said on Wednesday that Mamne Ould Oufkir, a suspect in the original kidnapping, had been freed.
The north of Mali is in the hands of local Islamist groups who first fought alongside and then outflanked Tuareg-led separatist rebels who routed government forces there in early April.
Diendere declined to comment on whether a ransom had also been paid to end the aid workers' captivity, one of a spate of hostage dramas in Africa's Sahel region.
Security experts say multi-million-dollar ransom payments are usually made, though never confirmed, by authorities.
There has been no official comment from Madrid or Rome on the circumstances of the release of the aid workers, who were seized in a refugee camp near Tindouf, Algeria.
The trio's departure from the Malian region of Gao, which is in the hands of various Islamist groups linked to al Qaeda, was delayed on Wednesday by a sandstorm that prevented aircraft sent by Burkina Faso from picking them up.
"It was the most difficult mission," said Diendere. "The weather was awful and we had to sleep outside in the pouring rain before being able to take off this morning."
(Additional reporting by Laurent Prieur in Nouakchott and Naomi O'Leary and Roberto Landucci in Rome; Writing by David Lewis; Editing by Andrew Roche)
Copyright © 2013 Reuters
- Huge education workforce
- The never-ending rape of the Camerons
- Holiday bookings spike now that Malaysians have done their civic duty
- Gan looking forward to quality time with family
- PLUS: Follow travel time advisory for smooth traffic
- Leave troubles behind with irresistible AirAsia deals
- State minister wants teen’s marriage to 40-year-old nullified
- Child bride and hubby enjoying married life
- Charge Riduan, say syariah lawyers
- Bangladeshi jailed for raping teen – and wants to wed her
- Tee on leave from party

- MCA not selling assets, says Chua
- 79 complaints lodged but zero Suhakam commissioners
- Sarawak leaders triple their salaries
- Probe into indelible ink issues
- Suria Capital, SBC Corp in RM1.8b Sabah JV
- CIMB advances in early trade, Dayang in focus
- RHB Research downgrades Dayang Enterprise to Neutral
- Alliance Research ups CIMB Group’s target price to RM9.64
- JF Apex Research ups Bumi Armada FV to RM4.27
- Dow, S&P end at all time high on Fed officials' reassurance
- China's bird flu outbreak cost US$6.5bil loss
- Microsoft unveils Xbox One with Spielberg, Activision tie-up
- What is the Irish loophole behind iPhone maker Apple's low tax bill(update)
- EPF invests more abroad, investment assets exceed half-a-trillion ringgit
- Bad behaviour spreads to oil market
- What is integrated talent management?
- Mida: Investments up 44% to RM49.3bil in first quarter
- San Miguel keen to keep bank unit if CIMB walks away from RM905.55mil deal
- 4As eyeing FODM conference in Thailand next year
- Injured Murray withdraws from French Open
- Ramy wins fiery battle of words and deeds
- Low Wee Wern fails to clear opening round again in British Open
- Teenager Addeen gets massive boost Down Under
- Hosts Malaysia make a tame exit at the hands of Germany
- Denmark not prepared to take on mighty China just yet
- Japanese upset Danes and Joo-bong is all smiles
- Dane loves to unwind with her Modern Family
- Tommy not afraid to play for country despite loss
- It’s the last $traw thanks to the BWF
- BAM: There will be no more sweeping under the carpet
- Cyclists give the thumbs up to world-class velodrome
- Australian Evans says Giro dream still alive
- Savinder Kaur is new middle distance queen after 1,500m victory
- Elena walks her way to a new record
- State minister wants teen’s marriage to 40-year-old nullified
- Bangladeshi jailed for raping teen – and wants to wed her
- Child bride and hubby enjoying married life
- Sarawak leaders triple their salaries
- Charge Riduan, say syariah lawyers
- Huge education workforce
- Loan sharks making life hell for retiree
- The never-ending rape of the Camerons
- Holiday bookings spike now that Malaysians have done their civic duty
- Whole neighbourhoods razed by Oklahoma tornado that killed 24
- Sarawak leaders triple their salaries
- HR manager laments declining standard of English
- EPF invests more abroad, investment assets exceed half-a-trillion ringgit
- Loan sharks making life hell for retiree
- Huge education workforce
- Green Packet ready to sell some assets
- What is the Irish loophole behind iPhone maker Apple's low tax bill(update)
- What is integrated talent management?
- CIMB Q1 profit advances 37%
- Child bride and hubby enjoying married life

