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Africa North
Hopes raised for Austrians held by Al-Qaeda: diplomat
2008-05-22
Diplomats said Wednesday that progress is being made in efforts to secure the release of two Austrians held by an Al-Qaeda linked group for the past three months. Wolfgang Ebner and Andrea Kloiber were seized in Tunisia by Al-Qaeda's north African offshoot but are now believed to be held in enchanting Mali. "My feeling is that we are halfway across choppy waters in a boat which we mustn't rock too much or else it could go under," Vienna's envoy in Africa Anton Prohaska told AFP. "(But) we can see the other side, it's within our reach."

The diplomatic metaphor conveys the delicacy and painstaking pace of the indirect negotiations over the pair. "Things are progressing, but slowly," added a Malian official within the negotiating team. "Contact has been made on several occasions through intermediaries. What is important is that the hostages are alive, and that the kidnappers respect their commitment to keeping them alive."

Ebner, 51 and Kloiber, 44, were taken hostage on February 22 in Tunisia's southeastern Sahara region, but are believed to have been moved to Mali. In mid-April, an Austrian envoy said negotiators had received proof that the two were still alive. Several ultimatum deadlines have passed but Austria says it still believes they can be saved.

Prohaska said negotiators "would have left Bamako already," if they didn't believe the pair would be found "safe and well."

The kidnappers have threatened to kill the hostages if attempts are made to free them by force.
That's pretty much SOP, isn't it?
Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb only acknowledged responsibility on March 10. The kidnappers initially demanded the release of a number of Islamic extremists imprisoned in Algeria and Tunisia. Then they later asked for the withdrawal of Austrian troops from Afghanistan and the release of two Islamic militants jailed in Vienna, with unconfirmed press reports saying a five million euro (7.9 million dollars) ransom was also being sought. "You know full well that the state does not pay ransoms," Prohaska added. "We want to reach a humanitarian solution so that the hostages can be reunited with their families."

According to a western diplomat in Bamako, the hostages are being held in an area on Mali and Algeria's border. That complicates negotiations, because rebel Tuaregs are active in the area and operations are difficult to organise without the approval of Algiers.
Posted by:Fred

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