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North Africa
Algeria ’negotiating tourists’ freedom’
2003-05-05
Talks are under way to secure the freedom of 31 European tourists who are being held in the Sahara desert, the Algerian Government has said. "Contacts are taking place at the moment on the liberation of the tourists," Tourism Minister Lakhdar Dorbani told the national parliament's tourism commission, Algerian state radio reports.
Boy, that's a thankless job: Algeria's tourism minister...
His statement was the first confirmation by an Algerian official that talks to secure the release of the hostages were being held. The minister declined to specify with whom the talks were being held. Some of the 31 tourists - 15 Germans, 10 Austrians, four Swiss nationals, a Dutchman and a Swede - have been missing since February. El Watan newspaper quotes Algerian security officials as saying that a gang of bandits had kidnapped the tourists in return for a ransom, and that talks on securing their release had been under way for three weeks. The paper said the tourists had been located in the Tamelrik mountain range, about 1,500 kilometres (900 miles) south-east of Algiers. Earlier reports speculated that the tourists had been kidnapped by the militant Islamic Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), linked to Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network.
That's my guess.
Posted by:Steve

#3  Kidnapped by nomad smugglers, organized crime or islamo-nuts (or all of the above): either way they're not in an enviable position, to say the least. As the FOMA, I don't know; somehow, its main theme has more or less been "the gvt did all of the atrocities" and the dirty war fought by the algerian shock troops. While the bloodletting certainly was and is instrumentalized by the generals, no doubts about it, this one-sidedness makes me uneasy.
Posted by: Anonymous   2003-05-05 15:24:35  

#2  

Check out site anp.org (don't know if link is there) for another point of view of the kidnappings. The site is fascinating as the Free Officers Movement of Algeria had not posted any communiques since November, and I thought they had been penetrated. Again, a totally different perspective on the troubles in Algeria.
Posted by: Michael   2003-05-05 09:50:30  

#1  I wonder how many of them remain alive. I'm praying for their release.
Posted by: KP   2003-05-05 08:14:33  

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