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Somalia's
president says terrorism growing there
04Sept.2009 Shaaficiyah Media
Three foreign workers with the
French aid group Action Against Hunger (ACF) were freed Saturday
after being held in Somalia since July, humanitarian agency
sources and Somali officials said.
The three, an American, a Zimbabwean
and a Pakistani, boarded a plane in the southern town of Luq,
and were expected to head to Nairobi.
The three were snatched in Mandera,
northern Kenya, on the night of July 17 and taken across the
nearby border into Somalia by gunmen.
Sheikh Ali Hussein, an official
of rebel Islamist movement Hezb al-Islam in Gedo province,
told AFP, "A small plane flew the hostages out of the
airport at Luq after they were freed by their kidnappers."
He said Hezb al-Islam, which
controls the region, had authorised their departure but had
nothing to do with their kidnapping.
Somalia's radical Shebab militia
has also said it had nothing to do with the abduction of the
three.
Hussein said that he had reports
that a ransom had been paid, while a local elder who declined
to be identified put the sum at 2.5 million dollars.
The kidnapping of foreigners
is rampant in Somalia, a Horn of Africa country ravaged by
cycles of devastating violence since the ouster of president
Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.
Four workers for ACF -- two French
women, a Belgian and a Bulgarian -- as well as two Kenyan
pilots, were released in August after being held for nine
months.
A French intelligence agent kidnapped
in July in Mogadishu is still held by Shebab and facing a
trial under Sharia law. A colleague seized at the same time
returned to France in August, saying he had escaped.
Shaaficiyah Media
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