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Somali kidnappers free aid staff Somali kidnappers free aid staff
(40 minutes later)
Two European aid workers with Medecins Sans Frontieres held by gunmen in Somalia for over a week have been released, say regional leaders. Two European aid workers with Medecins Sans Frontieres who were abducted by gunmen in Somalia nine days ago have been released.
The two men were abducted in their car with their Somali bodyguards in Hudur, Bakol region, on 19 April. The two men were kidnapped in their car with their Somali bodyguards in Hudur, Bakol region, on 19 April.
The Belgian doctor and Danish nurse were set free on Monday, Reuters news agency reports. The Belgian doctor and Danish nurse had reportedly been carrying out a nutrition study.
Sheikh Aden Yare, of the Islamist al-Shabab group, told Reuters the two had been freed without condition. Sheikh Aden Yare, of the Islamist al-Shabab, told Reuters news agency the pair had been freed without condition.
"They are free now. And this will not happen again," he was quoted as saying. "This will not happen again," he was quoted as saying.
The pair had reportedly been carrying out a nutrition study in the Rabdhure area. 'Tough talks'
Al-Shabab has sworn to topple Somalia's fragile federal transitional government, which is backed by African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu. The BBC Somali Service says al-Shabab controls the area where the aid workers were seized, but the kidnappers were local gunmen, not thought to be affiliated to any group.
Hassan Mohamed, an elder involved in the negotiations, told AFP news agency: "After days of tough talks, we finally succeeded in freeing the hostages and now they are in the hands of the elders."
The Horn of Africa nation is one of the world's most dangerous places for relief workers.The Horn of Africa nation is one of the world's most dangerous places for relief workers.
The UN estimates 35 aid staff were killed last year and 26 abducted in Somalia, which has not had a functioning government since 1991.The UN estimates 35 aid staff were killed last year and 26 abducted in Somalia, which has not had a functioning government since 1991.
The dead included three MSF workers - a Kenyan doctor, a French logistician, and a Somali driver - caught in a roadside bomb in the town of Kismayo in January 2008.The dead included three MSF workers - a Kenyan doctor, a French logistician, and a Somali driver - caught in a roadside bomb in the town of Kismayo in January 2008.
Some three million people - half of Somalia's population - are estimated to need food aid after years of unrest.
Al-Shabab has sworn to topple Somalia's fragile federal transitional government, which is backed by African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu.