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Italian aid worker Clementina Cantoni, who was
held hostage for more than three weeks in Afghanistan, has been
released, the Afghan Interior Ministry said Thursday.
(AP) |
Italian hostage Clementina Cantoni was released
after an ordeal lasting more than three weeks
and without any ransom
being paid, the country's
Interior Minister said.
"I am pleased to announce this evening that we were able to release
Clementina who was taken hostage 24 days ago," Interior Minister Ali Ahmed
Jalali told reporters at a hastily arranged late-night press conference.
"The policy of the Afghan government is not to deal with the
hostage-takers. We did not pay any ransom," Jalali said.
Cantoni, 32, who works for the aid group CARE International, was
snatched by gunmen on May 16 while driving in downtown Kabul. The
abduction sent shockwaves through both the Afghan and foreign communities
in the capital.
Afghan authorities said earlier that Cantoni was abducted by a criminal
gang rather than by Islamic militants.
She will return home Friday, Italian Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini
said.
Fini told Italian public television RaiDue late Thursday that Cantoni
would spend the night at the Italian embassy and that her parents were
about to leave for the Afghan capital.
The entire family will return home Friday, he said.
"Clementina is in good health and is currently under the protection of
our diplomatic authorities," a foreign ministry official told AFP speaking
on condition of anonymity.
Beatrice Spadacini, a spokeswoman for CARE International in Kabul, told
CNN that Cantoni "was treated fairly well."
Spadacini declined to comment when asked if a ransom was paid. "I doubt
it," she said. "We wanted her to be released unconditionally."
Italians welcomed Cantoni's liberation with great joy and relief.
The country's President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi said in a statement he was
overjoyed and deeply relieved. He thanked Afghan authorities "for their
precious cooperation that led to Clementina's liberation."
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who was in Luxembourg, said he was
"pleased and satisfied," Italy's ANSA news agency said.
Kabul earlier accused Rome of meddling in
negotiations to free Cantoni after Italian authorities had claimed her
release had been delayed by infighting
between different Afghan departments.
The Afghan Interior Ministry accused the Italian embassy of
establishing contact with the alleged kidnappers without informing Afghan
authorities.
Cantoni's father said she
had already spoken to members of her family by telephone.
(Agencies) |