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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 who were abducted by gunmen in Somalia nine days ago have been released. | |
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 had reportedly been carrying out a nutrition study. | |
Sheikh Aden Yare, of the Islamist al-Shabab, told Reuters news agency the pair had been freed without condition. | |
"This will not happen again," he was quoted as saying. | |
'Tough talks' | |
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. |