Afghanistan | |
Italy 'paid Taleban £1 million to free photographer' : NGO | |
2007-04-10 | |
![]() Gino Strada, the founder of Emergency, a non-governmental organisation, said Romano Prodi's government paid £1 million to secure the release of Gabriele Torsello, a freelance photographer who was abducted on 12 October last year and freed on 3 November. Emergency has been involved in negotiating the release of a number of Italian hostages in Afghanistan. The Taleban said on Sunday that it had beheaded an Afghan journalist and interpreter working with another Italian journalist who was freed after a much-criticised prisoner swap with the Taleban last month. The interpreter, Ajmal Naqshbandi, was kidnapped along with Daniele Mastrogiacomo of the Rome daily La Repubblica and a driver on 5 March. The driver was beheaded and Mastrogiacomo was released on 19 March after five Taleban militants were released. Mr Strada is pressing for the release of Rahmatullah Hanefi, who worked in Emergency's hospital in Lashkar Gah, the capital of Afghanistan's Helmand province. He was believed to have been taken into Afghan custody after Mastrogiacomo's release. The hospital played a key role in negotiating the photographer's freedom. On Sunday, Sayed Ansari, a spokesman for Afghanistan's intelligence service, accused Mr Hanefi of helping the Taleban kidnap the three. Mr Strada said that Mr Prodi's government knew Mr Hanefi was trustworthy because he had been entrusted with £1 million to deliver to the Taleban in exchange for Torsello's freedom. Several members of Italy's parliament are now pressing the Prodi government to brief them on the claims.
| |
Link |
Afghanistan |
Eye-tie Photog Kidnapped in Afghanistan Released |
2006-11-04 |
![]() Sequi said authorities at an Italian-run hospital in Helmand province received a phone call Friday telling them to go to the road between Lashkar Gah and Kandahar, where an Afghan hospital employee found Torsello, he said. Torsello, 36, a freelance photographer, is in good health, Sequi said. Maj. Luke Knittig, a spokesman for NATO's International Security Assistance Force, said the military was helping transport Torsello back to Kabul by air, but he didn't know when he would arrive. In Italy, Modesto Nicoli, Torsello's family spokesman, welcomed the photographer's release. "It's an indescribable joy, it's a news we have been waiting for a long time," he told SkyTG24. |
Link |
Afghanistan |
Taliban attacks kill six cops, journalist freed |
2006-11-04 |
![]() The six policemen, including a district police chief, were killed when rebels attacked a police convoy in Herat province on Thursday. Meanwhile, an Italian photographer kidnapped in Afghanistan last month has been freed and is in good health, Italian authorities said Friday. Gabriele Torsello and his Afghan translator were kidnapped Oct. 14 as they drove from Lashkar Gah, the capital of the southern Helmand province, toward neighbouring Kandahar. |
Link |
Afghanistan |
Taliban demand Italian troops' withdrawl for journalist's release |
2006-10-19 |
![]() The kidnappers had earlier demanded that Italy handover by midnight on Sunday Abdul Rahman, an Afghan who converted from Islam to Christianity in return for the hostage's release, Reuters reported. Rahman, 41, converted to Christianity 16 years when he was a refugee in Pakistan and worked with a Christian aid group. He was spirited away to Italy in March of this year, where he was granted asylum after having been denounced by Afghan clerics as an apostate, a charge that carries the death penalty in Afghanistan. |
Link |
Afghanistan | |
Afghan gunmen kidnap Italian journalist | |
2006-10-15 | |
![]() News of his abduction emerged through the independent news agency Pajhwok, which spoke to Torsello's travelling companion, Gholam Mohammad, about the incident. When Pajhwok rang the journalist's mobile phone, the man who answered said: 'We are the Taliban and we have abducted the foreigner on charges of spying.' However, a spokesman for the Islamic insurgent group told the Reuters news agency that they were not involved in any kidnappings, and blamed criminals instead. Although born in Puglia, southern Italy, Torsello has lived in London for some years with his wife and son, according to Peace Reporter, an online Italian newspaper which specialises in reports from war zones. He had been working in Afghanistan since 2005 and had operated in areas of conflicts before. In 2003 he published a book with Amnesty International, titled The Heart of Kashmir. Torsello's website says that he 'is currently in Afghanistan - Helmand province - available for assignments.' Peace Reporter said Torsello had spoken by telephone after his abduction to the security at a hospital run by an Italian relief organisation in Lashkar Gah. He said that he did not know where he was being held and confirmed how he was taken forcibly from the bus.
| |
Link |