Monday, September 22, 2008

Scary Land of Moses II

Gunmen free foreign hostages seized in Egypt

Cairo/United Nations: Kidnappers have freed 19 hostages they seized in Egypt, including Western tourists, and all are safe and sound, Egypt's Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said on Monday.

The tourists, identified as five Italians, five Germans, a Romanian and eight Egyptians, had been on safari in a remote desert border area, Egyptian officials said.

"They have been released, all of them, safe and sound," Aboul Gheit told reporters in New York before a meeting with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly. "It was a group of gangsters."

The kidnapping was the first of its kind in Egypt in living memory, although militants have hit the country's tourist industry in recent decades with bomb and gun attacks that have killed hundreds.

Tourism Minister Zoheir Garrana told reporters the hostages had been taken out of the country.

The tourists were believed to have been seized on Friday from a safari near where the borders of Egypt, Sudan and Libya meet.

Security sources said the kidnappers had asked for 6 million euros ($8.8 million) to free the hostages, they said there was no sign militant Islamists were involved.

The state-run Middle East News Agency (MENA) reported that the group had spent the night of September16 in a hotel in Dakhla oasis in Egypt's Western Desert before heading out toward the Gilf Al Kebir national reserve. They had been due to reach another oasis on Saturday to end their tour, but never made it.

Garrana said authorities learned of the kidnapping after a tour operator called his German wife and told her he was being held hostage with the group. Egyptian state television said those held included an Egyptian border guard officer.

Gilf Al Kebir, the area where the tourists were seized, attracts adventure travelers with bleak desert scenes including a massive crater and the Cave of Swimmers, whose prehistoric paintings were made famous by the 1996 film "The English Patient".

Garrana told Egyptian television the kidnappers were "most likely" Sudanese. He later told Al Jazeera television that the area from which the kidnapped tour operator called his wife indicated that the hostages had been taken to Sudan.
6 million euros ($8.8 million), I bet UMNO wont bailed me out.

1 comment:

  1. dun even dream CA. they only interested to get 8.8mil from you and not to bail you out with tat.

    ReplyDelete