French
Reporter Kidnapped in Somalia
By MOHAMED OLAD
HASSAN – 7 hours ago
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — A French journalist
was kidnapped Sunday in northern Somalia by
gunmen who apparently were demanding a $70,000
ransom, authorities and a media watchdog said.
Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders
identified the reporter as cameraman Gwen Le
Gouil and said he was doing a story on
trafficking in illegal migrants. Without citing
sources, the group said it appeared he was
kidnapped by human traffickers demanding
$70,000.
"The man has been abducted by armed men,"
said Yusuf Mumin Bidde, a deputy governor in
Puntland, a semiautonomous region in northeast
Somalia. "He had no security with him."
Ali Abdi Aware, a local government minister
in Puntland, said a rescue operation was under
way.
"The regional administration has sent forces
to rescue the reporter," Aware told The
Associated Press. He did not elaborate.
French authorities were in contact with
"those who seem to be the kidnappers," French
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said from
Paris. "I hope that the contact will not be lost
and I hope that it only concerns a demand for
ransom," he said in a television broadcast.
Puntland is a relatively stable region in a
country beset by chaos and violence. But in
recent months, it has increasingly become
associated with rampant piracy off its coast.
"This kidnapping is even more alarming
because it takes place in a lawless place where
eight journalists have been killed since the
beginning of this year," Paris-based Reporters
Without Borders said.
The group said Somalia is the most dangerous
country in the world for journalists outside of
Iraq.
Le Gouil was kidnapped just outside the port
city of Bossaso, which is the main departure
point for tens of thousands of Somalis who pay
smugglers to ferry them across the Gulf of Aden.
The destination is Yemen and onward to richer
Arab countries, but the trip can be deadly.
The Bossaso-Yemen course also is part of a
well-known arms smuggling route.
On Sunday, the international aid group
Medecins Sans Frontieres, or Doctors Without
Borders, said the bodies of 56 people who
recently set off from Bossaso washed up on shore
in Yemen. Half the victims were women; five were
children.
Some 27,960 people have made the voyage to
Yemen this year, according to MSF. At least 593
died in the attempt and 659 were reported
missing, the group said. Waves of migrants
leaving West Africa for Europe make similarly
perilous journeys.
Bossaso is about 930 miles north of the
Somali capital, Mogadishu, which is at the
center of an Islamic insurgency that has killed
thousands of people this year.
Somalia has not had an effective central
government since 1991. Last week, a director at
the country's Security Ministry said a radical
Islamic group that was driven from power one
year ago by a Western-supported offensive is
making a significant comeback in Somalia and the
government can do little to stop it.
Associated
Press Writer Laurent Pirot in Paris contributed
to this report. |