Foreign workers held in Somalia
2008-09-23 16:04
Mogadishu - Gunmen have kidnapped two foreign aid workers from eastern Ethiopia and taken them to central Somalia, officials and the aid agency Médecins du Monde said on Tuesday.
"The two foreign aid workers - a male and a female - were kidnapped (on Monday) ... in Ethiopia and were taken to central Somalia," said Hareri Hassan Barre, the commissioner for the Balanbale district in central Somalia.
"We are getting information that they are French nationals, but we have not confirmed that," he added.
The pair was kidnapped from Ethiopia's Fadhigaradle village, where they were visiting drought-hit areas.
"We have sent security forces to search for the aid workers, who were brought to the region late yesterday," said Ali Sheikh Hashi, another local official.
French aid agency Médecins du Monde, for whom the pair works, confirmed the abductions.
"The organisation is in permanent contact with the authorities, its team on the ground as well as other actors in the field," it said in a statement.
Armed Somali gangs have carried out scores of kidnappings in recent months, often targeting foreigners or Somalis working with international organisations to demand ransoms.
Guerrilla war
On Monday, Somali gunmen freed a German national and his Somali wife who had been kidnapped over the weekend in the northern Somali breakaway state of Puntland.
Kidnappers have also been holding three journalists - a Canadian, an Australian and a Somali - since August 23 and are reportedly demanding $2.5m for their release.
Somalia has been torn by 17 years of almost uninterrupted civil conflict since the 1991 ouster of former president Mohamed Siad Barre. Numerous UN-backed initiatives have failed to restore stability in the country.
Thousands of civilians have died in the guerrilla war that has pitted invading Ethiopian troops against Islamist insurgents since last year.