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European governments sanctioned $45million in ransom | ||
2006-05-22 | ||
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All three governments have publicly denied paying ransom money. But according to the documents, held by security officials in Baghdad who have played a crucial role in hostage negotiations, sums from $2.5 million to $10 million per person have been paid over the past 21 months. Among those said to have received cash ransoms was the gang responsible for seizing British hostages including Kenneth Bigley, the murdered Liverpool engineer. The list of payments has also been seen by Western diplomats, who are angered at the behaviour of the three governments, arguing that it encourages organised crime gangs to grab more foreign captives. In theory we stand together in not rewarding kidnappers, but in practice it seems some administrations have parted with cash and so it puts other foreign nationals at risk from gangs who are confident that some governments do pay, one senior envoy in the Iraqi capital said. More than 250 foreigners have been abducted since the US-led invasion in 2003. At least 44 have been killed; 135 were released, three escaped, six were rescued and the fate of the others remains unknown. A number of other governments, including those of Turkey, Romania, Sweden and Jordan, are said to have paid for their hostages to be freed, as have some US companies with lucrative reconstruction contracts in Iraq. At least four businessmen with dual US and Iraqi nationality have been returned, allegedly in exchange for payments by their employers. This money is often disguised as expenses paid to trusted go-betweens for costs that they claim to incur. The release this month of Rene Braunlich and Thomas Nitzschke, two German engineers, for a reported $5 million payment prompted senior Iraqi security officials to seek talks with leading Western diplomats in the capital on how to handle hostage release. When the men returned home, Alaa al-Hashimi, the Iraqi Ambassador to Germany, revealed that the German Government handed over a large amount to free the pair after 99 days in captivity. The kidnappers are understood to have asked for $10 million. Liam Fox, the Shadow Defence Secretary, called last night for an immediate end to the practice. The idea that Western governments would have paid ransoms is extremely disturbing, he said. It is essential that governments never give in to blackmail from terrorists or criminals if security is ever to be maintained. Michael Moore, a Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman, said: These governments have created a kidnappers charter. Everyone from outside Iraq working in the country becomes more vulnerable as a result. Police say that about 30 people a day are abducted in Baghdad. Most Iraqis taken are returned once their families pay a ransom. An Iraqi counter-terrorism official, who asked not to be named, said that local experts are usually excluded from negotiations involving Westerners. He said: Too often governments and their military keep secrets from each other , and certainly from us, and do what they want including paying out millions, no matter what their stated policy on ransoms. Western diplomats claim that the reason for their secrecy is the suspicion that some in the Iraqi security apparatus are too closely associated with militias and some of the criminal gangs to be trusted. The family of Bayan Solagh Jabr, who was Interior Minister until the announcement on Saturday of a provisional government, was among the victims of the kidnap gangs when his sister, Eman, was abducted in January. She is said to have been freed a fortnight later after a ransom was agreed. Mr Jabr is now Finance Minister. The mutual distrust is hindering efforts to wage an effective war against the underworld gangs responsible for most of the abuctions of Westerners, the Baghdad official said. At least two crime gangs are alleged to have sold on some of their foreign captives to militant groups who use the hostages for propaganda purposes rather than obtaining ransoms. Britain has never paid to free its citizens, despite pressure from the employees of some hostages, but is understood to have paid intermediaries expenses for their efforts to make contact with the kidnappers. British officials have been criticised for giving the kidnappers of the peace activist Norman Kember time to escape to avoid the risk of a gun battle with Special Forces troops sent to rescue him and his two fellow captives from a house in central Baghdad in March. Only when Jill Carroll, an American journalist, was freed eight days later did intelligence experts discover that she had been held by the same notorious crime family, who were working with Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the wanted al-Qaeda leader in Iraq. That revelation infuriated US officials in Baghdad, who had let Britain take the lead in tracing and freeing Professor Kember, 74, and his two Canadian colleagues. FBI agents are investigating claims that this gang sold some of its hostages, including American contractors and aid workers, to militant Islamic groups. The gang is reported to have had a hand in organising the abduction of three British hostages, Margaret Hassan, Mr Bigley and Professor Kember, and three Italian journalists. Figures involved in secret talks to resolve hostage cases told The Times that Mrs Hassan, an aid worker who had converted to Islam and taken Iraqi citizenship, was murdered soon after Tony Blair made it clear in a television broadcast seen on an Arab satellite channel that the Government would not pay a ransom. Wealthy benefactors had signalled their readiness to pay for her release. A key figure in brokering some of the deals has been Sheikh Abdel Salam al-Qubaisi, a militant Sunni cleric and senior figure in the Association of Muslim Scholars. Professor Kember and his party had just visited the group when he was abducted last November.
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Iraq | |
"Large" Ransom Paid For Release Of German Hostages Says Ambassador | |
2006-05-04 | |
![]() However, al-Hashimi's claim is likely to trigger further debate on the wisdom of paying for the release of hostages. While the official policy of Britain and the United States is that Western governments should refuse to negotiate with kidnappers, Germany, France and Italy are believed to have paid million dollar sums for the release of kidnapped nationals. It quickly became apparent that a criminal gang that had seized Nitzschke and Braeunlich, who were kidnapped outside their workplace on 24 January near Baji in northern Iraq. At the time of the men's capture, there was speculation that Germans were being targeted, because Berlin, unlike Washington or London, paid ransoms.
A month before the two engineers were kidnapped, German diplomats admitted the government had paid five million dollars for the freeing from captivity of a German woman working in Iraq, Susanne Osthoff. According to a report by the German weekly magazine Focus, Nitzschke and Braeunlich's kidnappers had demanded a 12 million dollar ransom for their release. | |
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Iraq |
German hostages in Iraq return home |
2006-05-04 |
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Iraq |
Germany likely paid ransom to free Iraq hostages |
2006-05-03 |
![]() "Regarding the payment of ransom, I don't know, but I assume it was a large amount of money," Iraq's ambassador to Germany Alaa Al-Hashimy told ARD public television. The two men were due to arrive at Berlin's Tegel airport later on Wednesday but officials were tightlipped about the circumstances surrounding their kidnap and subsequent release after nearly 100 days in captivity. Separately, Germany's foreign ministry criticized media reports that a ransom was paid to Iraqi kidnappers for the men, who were handed over to German authorities in Baghdad on Tuesday. "Any indication in this direction could lead to imitators," deputy Foreign Minister Gernot Erler told Bayerischen Rundfunk on Wednesday, adding that such speculation could endanger future cases of hostage-taking. German archaeologist Susanne Osthoff was freed in December after being held hostage in Iraq for three weeks. German media have quoted unidentified diplomats as saying Berlin paid the kidnappers $5 million for her release. The German government is known to have paid ransoms for hostages in the past, but refused to comment on whether it did for Osthoff. Erler said analysis of video footage of the two German hostages broadcast during their ordeal suggested that they were the victims of Iraq's hostage industry, rather than a terrorist organization. The two men, Thomas Nitzschke und Rene Braeunlich from the eastern city of Leipzig, were abducted on January 24 outside their workplace in the industrial town of Baiji, 110 miles north of Baghdad. |
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Iraq |
Hunt for Zarqawi escalates, now broader effort than hunt for Osama |
2006-05-03 |
As the search for terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi intensifies, U.S. troops raided a suspected al Qaeda hideout Tuesday, killing 10 insurgents, and CBS News correspondent David Martin reports that investigators have learned that in another raid, forces were within 1,000 yards of al-Zarqawi. More than 200 members of al-Zarqawi's network have been killed or captured, including many of his top lieutenants, Martin reports. In an effort to build momentum, Lt. Gen. Stan McChrystal, who is leading the effort, is asking for several hundred paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne to be thrown into the hunt. One insurgent was wounded in the pre-dawn raid at a safehouse as American troops searched for "an al Qaeda terrorist leader" about 25 miles southwest of the U.S. air base in Balad, north of Baghdad, the military said. Troops surprised a guard and shot him before he could fire his pistol, the statement said. As the insurgent fell, he detonated a suicide vest, the statement added. Two more insurgents were killed inside the hideout and the others outside as they tried to escape, the statement said. Two of the dead were also found wearing explosive vests, the statement said. The statement did not say whether al-Zarqawi was the target of the raid or whether anyone escaped. It was the fourth raid reported by the U.S. command against al-Zarqawi's network since April 16, when American troops stormed a house in Youssifiyah just south of the capital, killing six people, including a woman, and arresting five people, among them an unidentified al Qaeda official. However, CNN reported that the captives said al-Zarqawi had been in a nearby house. Martin reports under the command of McChrystal, the hunt for al-Zarqawi has now eclipsed in size the hunt for Osama bin Laden, which has been hampered by a lack of good intelligence and Pakistan's refusal to allow U.S. troops to operate in their border area. The assault on al-Zarqawi's network is being conducted by a secret unit known as Task Force 145, which is divided into four teams three American and one British which conduct raids virtually every night. In other developments: Since the drop in U.S. deaths in March, American casualties have been rising. April was the deadliest month of the year for American forces with more than 70 deaths. A U.S. soldier was killed Tuesday in a roadside bombing south of Baghdad, the U.S. command said. In the latest violence, a bomb exploded inside a bus in central Baghdad, killing two people and injuring five, police said. Gunmen killed four students in an ambush in southwestern Baghdad, police said. Four Iraqi soldiers were slain the insurgent stronghold of Ramadi two days after they graduated from basic training as part of the first all-Sunni class, according to police. The German Foreign Ministry said two German men taken hostage in January had been released and are safe. Thomas Nitzschke and Rene Braeunlich were with Germans officials in Iraq, said a ministry spokesman, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with government policy. A militant Iraqi group that identified itself in a video as the Brigade of Supporters of the Sunna and Tawhid kidnapped the pair Jan. 24. On Monday, the senior Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee proposed that Iraq be divided into three separate regions Kurdish, Shiite and Sunni with a central government in Baghdad. In a column in The New York Times, Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., wrote that the idea "is to maintain a united Iraq by decentralizing it, giving each ethno-religious group ... room to run its own affairs, while leaving the central government in charge of common interests." CBS News correspondent Allen Pizzey reports Biden's statement is a reflection of what is happening in Iraqi neighborhoods, where people who feel they are in the minority are coalescing along ethnic lines and turning to ethnic militias rather than the state for protection. Stepped up operations against al-Zarqawi's network are occurring as U.S. and Iraqi officials are making overtures to other Sunni Arab groups, hoping to convince them to abandon the insurgency and join the political process under a new government of Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds. Last weekend, President Jalal Talabani said officials from his office had met with insurgent representatives and he was hopeful they might agree to a deal. Talabani also said American officials had met with insurgents. U.S. officials have confirmed meeting Iraqis linked to the Sunni Arab insurgency but have avoided identifying them. Last month, however, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad attributed a sharp drop in U.S. deaths in March to an ongoing dialogue with disaffected Sunnis. On Tuesday, a leading Arabic language newspaper said Khalilzad had met with insurgent representatives in Amman, Jordan, on Jan. 16 and later in Baghdad on seven occasions. The newspaper, Asharq Al-Awsat, attributed the information to an unidentified insurgent official. The official was quoted as saying the insurgents presented several demands, including halt to military operations, an end to arrests of "innocent Iraqis" and the release of prisoners "who were arrested unjustly." According to the newspaper, the official said his group presented a memorandum to Khalilzad, who expressed interest and promised to respond. However, no response was received and the insurgents decided to break off the dialogue after the new government was announced April 22. There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Embassy on the report. In Washington, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said "we have made it clear that we are interested in talking to people who know somebody who might be involved in insurgent activities in an effort to bring these people into the political process." Khalilzad has spoken in several interviews about reaching out to the Sunnis, however U.S. officials have avoided saying publicly that they had met with representatives of insurgent groups. In an interview with the BBC in April, the ambassador also cautioned that the dialogue was "a long way" from a deal to end the fighting. U.S. overtures to the Sunnis appear to have slowed in recent weeks as American diplomats and Iraqi politicians focused on speeding up formation of the new government, which had been deadlocked until the Shiites agreed to replace Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari with another Shiite, Nouri al-Maliki. Al-Maliki was officially appointed as prime minister-designate on April 22 and has pledged to complete his Cabinet this month. That is the final stage in establishing the new government. U.S. officials believe a unity government can over time calm sectarian tensions and lure many Sunnis away from the insurgency. On Tuesday, Shiite officials reported a new snag emerged in the negotiations when Sunni politicians insisted on key posts, including deputy prime minister and a major ministry such as finance or education. Shiites, who hold 130 of the 275 seats in parliament, offered a lesser ministry but the Sunnis refused, according to Shiite politician Bassem Sharif. Talks were to continue Wednesday, he said. Sunni politicians are also anxious for parliament to consider amendments to the new constitution. Sunnis oppose several provisions, including one allowing formation of regional governments. Many Sunnis fear that would lead to Iraq's breakup and deprive them of a fair share of the country's vast oil wealth. Shiites and Kurds agreed to study changes in the constitution during the first four months of the new parliament. However, Shiite officials said Tuesday they want to delay formation of the committee to study changes until the new Cabinet has been chosen. The issue is due for discussion during a parliament session Wednesday. |
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Talabani sez insurgents view Shi'ites, Iran as main threats |
2006-05-03 |
Iraq's president appealed for national unity and the renunciation of sectarian violence ahead of a parliament meeting set for Wednesday, saying he had met with Sunni Arab insurgent leaders and observed a "great change" in their war aims. The insurgents "do not think that the Americans are the main enemy," President Jalal Talabani said in an interview on al-Hurra television Tuesday night. "They feel threatened by what they call the 'Iranian threat.' " He referred to the insurgents' fear of Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority, which many Sunnis believe is dominated by the neighboring Shiite theocracy in Iran. Despite their worries about Iran, Talabani said, he found them "reasonable and ready for the peaceful political process," and he appealed to Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds to participate together in a government. "If the current government is formed as a national unity government which represents the entire spectrum of the Iraqi people, then I think we will be able to solve the problem of terrorism within a year," Talabani said. The newly elected prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is ostensibly working on forming such a government. At the most recent meeting of parliament, on April 22, legislators gave Maliki 30 days to choose a cabinet. Although there has been much speculation in Baghdad over who might get what position, Maliki has not made any announcements. In Baghdad on Tuesday, three concealed bombs killed at least six Iraqis, police Gen. Raad Mohammed said, and police found four other residents of the capital handcuffed and shot in the head. Outside the capital, a bomb killed a police officer near Baqubah, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, and insurgents attempted to assassinate the governor of Anbar province in western Iraq by detonating a bomb near his motorcade in Ramadi. The explosion killed at least two of his bodyguards, but the governor, Mamoun Sami Rasheed, survived. A U.S. soldier was killed Monday night when a roadside bomb exploded near his vehicle south of Baghdad, military authorities said in a statement. The U.S. military also announced that troops killed 10 suspected foreign insurgents in an early morning raid on a safe house about 20 miles north of Baghdad. The soldiers were searching for a leader of the insurgent group al-Qaeda in Iraq, according to a statement, when a sleeping guard at the house awakened and drew a pistol. Only one of the insurgents survived the ensuing firefight, the military said. The Central Criminal Court of Iraq convicted 12 Iraqis of aiding insurgent attacks on government and allied troops. Two of the men were sentenced to life in prison for belonging to al-Qaeda in Iraq; a third received a life sentence for distributing anti-government pamphlets and providing payments to the families of insurgents killed while fighting the Iraqi government. Two German engineers kidnapped in Iraq were released Tuesday after more than three months in captivity, the German foreign minister said. Rene Braeunlich and Thomas Nitzschke appeared unharmed and in good health despite their ordeal, Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in a statement. They were expected to return to Germany on Wednesday. The statement did not describe the circumstances of their release. Steinmeier, at a news conference in Santiago, Chile, thanked "the support of our partners in Europe and America" for helping secure their freedom, the Associated Press reported. "I ask for your understanding that the government can give no further details about this case or about the circumstances of the release," Reinhard Silberberg, the Foreign Ministry's state secretary in charge of a hostage task force, said at a news conference, the Reuters news service reported. The engineers, both from a company based in Leipzig, were driving to a government-owned detergent plant outside Baiji in northern Iraq on Jan. 24 when they disappeared. Their captors, a group calling itself Ansar al-Tawhid wa-Sunna, released four videos depicting Braeunlich and Nitzschke. In the final video, released April 9, they threatened to kill the men unless all detainees held by U.S. and allied forces in Iraq were released. Similar demands have been made in several other kidnapping cases, including that of American journalist Jill Carroll, who was set free March 30 after nearly three months in captivity. More than 425 foreigners, and several times that many Iraqis, have been taken hostage since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, according to U.S. officials who track abductions. |
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German hostages freed in Iraq |
2006-05-03 |
![]() He addedd the men, being looked after in Germany's embassy in Baghdad, were expected to return home on Wednesday. "After spending more than three months under inhumane conditions they are in German care," added Steinmeier, who was on an official visit to Chile. |
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Iraq |
Iraq abductors seek 12 million dollars for Germans |
2006-04-14 |
![]() After studying a video released by the kidnappers April 9, the government in Berlin believes the two hostages might have been sold by their original abductors to a criminal gang, Focus said in its online edition. Changing political demands by the kidnappers were seen in Berlin as a possible attempt to cover up the criminal background to the abduction, the report said. Thomas Nitzschke, 28, and Rene Braeunlich, 32, were seized on January 24 in Bayji while they were on their way to do contract work at an Iraqi factory. In the latest video, Nitzschke appealed for help to the German government. Weve been in captivity here for more than 60 days. We are at the end of our tether. We cant stand it any longer. Help us please, Nitzschke said in German in the video which appeared on an Islamist website. There had been no word on their fate since an early February video message. The video, only a few seconds long, was the fourth to be issued by the abductors, who have not identified themselves. The film appeared to have been made on March 28. A printed message in Arabic appeared to threaten the men with murder. A banner running through the video said in Arabic, In the name of God the Merciful, Battalion of the Supporters of Tawhid and Sunna. It also contained a black panel with a final ultimatum demanding US forces release prisoners in Iraq. If you do not meet our demands to release the detained men and women from the prisons and if you do not cease all support for the Americans and their helpers, you will immediately suffer the just penalty, it said, according to one translation. Relatives and friends of the two engineers staged a vigil in support of the men in their home town of Leipzig on Thursday evening. The employer of the two, Peter Bienert of the firm Cryotec near Leipzig, had earlier complained that he was not receiving enough information from the foreign ministry about efforts to gain the mens release. Bienert had been criticized for sending the men to Iraq. |
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German hostages plead for their lives |
2006-04-10 |
![]() German Chancellor Angela Merkel says her Government is scrutinising the video of engineers Thomas Nitzschke, 28, and Rene Braeunlich, 32, which was posted on an Islamic Internet site on Sunday. "We will do everything in our power to save the hostages and to bring them back to Germany," she said. In the 24-second video, dated March 28, Mr Nitzschke pleads with the German Government to save him and Mr Braeunlich. "We have been held captive here for more than 60 days. We are close to breaking point. Please help us. Please help us," he said. The video shows the two hostages looking haggard and wearing beards. In an accompanying statement the kidnappers threatened: "Know that if our two demands - the release of all Iraqi men and women held in occupation prisons and a halt to all aid to Americans and their agents, including Shiites - are not met, punishment will be meted out quickly. Those of you who help the occupiers, the infidels and the Shiites, know that you and your citizens will not escape the jihadists (holy warriors)." |
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AP notices that ransom kidnappings fund Iraq insurgents |
2006-02-08 |
EFL![]() Other sources of funding include extortion, attacks on fuel tankers and other types of banditry, and possibly even government money earmarked for securing infrastructure and battling the insurgency - either directly or through corrupt officials. Most media attention falls on the 268 foreigners known to have been abducted since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. Forty-four have been killed and 135 released, according to the Washington-based Brookings Institution. Three others escaped and three were rescued, it said, while the fate of the others was not known. The real figure of foreigners abducted is believed to be higher because truck drivers from Turkey and other neighboring countries are often believed ransomed with no publicity. ![]() Carroll's kidnapping was claimed by the "Revenge Brigade." Another group, the "Tawhid and Sunnah Brigade," said it kidnapped German engineers Thomas Nitzschke and Rene Braeunlich. "These are single-operation names," said Mustafa Alani, an Iraqi who heads the Security and Terrorism Studies Program at the Gulf Research Center in Dubai. "They protect the real group behind the kidnapping along with its credibility if the operation goes bad," he said. |
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Iraq |
2 German engineers kidnapped in Iraq |
2006-02-03 |
As the kidnappers of two German engineers issue a chilling 72-hour ultimatum threatening to behead them, speculation mounts that Germans are being targeted for abduction in Iraq because Berlin paid a ransom to free archaeologist Susanne Osthoff in December. Meanwhile the engineers' employer is under fire for sending them to one of the most dangerous places on earth. In a videotape aired on Tuesday, the kidnappers of two German workers in Iraq demanded that Berlin shut down its embassy in Baghdad and German companies cease all operations in the country, otherwise Rene Bräunlich, 31, and Thomas Nitzschke, 28, will be killed. "We are moved and shocked by the video," Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told reporters. "It's testimony to a crime that shows a contempt for humanity." The engineers come from the eastern German city of Leipzig and had been in Iraq on a six-day stint to finalize the handover of a factory. The tape shows them wearing tracksuit tops and kneeling down in front of four masked men, three wielding guns and one shouting out the demands from a piece of paper. The hostage-takers abducted the men last Tuesday outside their workplace in the industrial town of Baiji, 110 miles north of Baghdad, in the corner of the notorious Sunni triangle where the worst of the Iraqi insurgency has been concentrated, and where even heavily armed US soldiers can think of little else than making it back to their base alive. For western civilians, Baiji, site of Iraq's largest oil refinery, is a no-go area. Experts from a crisis group led by Steinmeier are examining the pictures closely to determine what brand of kidnappers they are dealing with. "We think the situation is serious," Steinmeier told reporters, adding that the government was doing "what is necessary and possible" to get the men released. He did not elaborate. A first videotape sent out by the kidnappers last week alarmed Berlin officials because it showed a banner in the background that read: "Followers of al-Tawhid and Sunnah Brigades." Al-Tawhid used to be the name of the terror group led by Abu Mussab al-Zarkawi, the notorious leader of al-Qaida in Iraq who has personally beheaded hostages in front of rolling video cameras. Diplomats in Berlin say that means the engineers may be in greater danger than Osthoff, whose abductors were primarily interested in money. None of the three previous kidnappings of foreigners known to have taken place in the Baiji area have had happy endings. A Turkish hostage was killed and a Brazilian has been missing for over a year. For Steinmeier, who only became foreign minister in November, the last few months have been a baptism of fire. His crisis team secured the release of Osthoff, but that may turn out to be a hollow victory if kidnappers now get the message that unlike the British and Americans, the Germans are willing to pay to get their people back. In a gaffe that may yet come back to haunt him, Steinmeier confirmed indirectly that money did change hands to free Osthoff. Asked if the payment of ransom money in her case may have triggered the abduction of the two engineers, he said: "Not the payment of a ransom, but the media reporting about it." It's not just the ransom payment for Osthoff that was a problem. In her case, the German government for the first time dealt with the kidnappers directly, handing over cash without involving a third country or an organization to cover its tracks. That means the government can't credibly deny that it paid money. In previous kidnapping cases, ransom payments were also reported to have been paid. But because the money flowed via third parties, Berlin could claim that it hadn't given in to the kidnappers. In Iraq, news that a government makes straight payouts is likely to get around among insurgents. "Germans in Iraq are now particularly attractive," said Kurdish leader Dilshad Barzani who worked to secure Osthoff's release. Steve Romano, until 2004 the head of the FBI's crisis negotiation team which specialized in kidnappings, said governments must under no circumstances negotiate directly with kidnappers through diplomats or intelligence agents. "Governments are rich, the kidnappers know that they can pay any amount of money," said Romano. On the other hand it's incredibly difficult not to pay. "People could die, that leaves no one unaffected." But if you give in once, you have to give in always -- kidnappers know that, he said. Security sources said the German government has not yet managed to make contact with the kidnappers. German media reports said a number of mediators had offered their services but none of them had been able to prove they had access to them. Deputy Foreign Minister Gernot Erler last week criticized Cryotec, the eastern German hostages' employer, for sending the engineers to Iraq despite the dangers that became evident to Germans only weeks ago with the kidnapping of Osthoff. "Those who sent these two technicians there and let them work without protection bear a high responsibility," said Erler. A number of politicians have demanded that Cryotec should foot at least part of the bill resulting from efforts to release them. And the German business federation DIHK warned companies not to send staff to Iraq where insurgents have kidnapped over 200 foreigners since the US-led invasion in March. Hostage-takers have killed some 39 foreigners. The latest kidnapping shows how lucrative contracts to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure prove too tempting to resist, both for companies and the staff who venture into the death zone to earn fat bonuses. Some 20 German firms are still represented in Iraq, according to the president of the German-Iraqi Association of Small and Medium-Sized Businesses, Gelan Khulusi. The number of German staff there is less than 50 according to official figures, but non-official estimates put it at several hundred, despite Foreign Ministry warnings. To survive they either take the Rambo option of hiring heavily armed body guards earning $500 to $2,000 a day, or they try not to attract attention. Iraqi-born Khulusi wears a shabby suit when he goes to Iraq, always hires rusty old taxis and sits next to the driver. Germans favor the high-speed option. Get in, do your job as quickly as possible and get out. That was the plan for Bräunlich and Nitzsche. Last year their 15-man company, which had a contract to build a plant that separates oxygen from nitrogen for the state-owned Arab Detergent Chemicals Company (Aradet), flew six Iraqi technicians to Germany to train them on the equipment. But Aradet pressed Cryotec to send some German staff to start up the plant, so the two men traveled there on Sunday, Jan. 22. They planned to stay for six days. They seem to have felt safe. Bräunlich told his girlfriend there was no need to worry. In reality they were lucky even to have made it to Baiji, having traveled overland from Turkey. Even the short trip from Baghdad airport into town is so risky that security services want $2,000 for the drive in an armoured convoy. It's unclear what arrangements the two kidnapping victims made to protect themselves. The company hasn't said whether it provided them with bodyguards. "In preparing the trip everything possible was done to minimize the danger," is all Cryotec managing director Peter Bienert has said on the subject. Bräunlich, a keen amateur soccer player, went because he wanted to keep his job, people who knew him have said. "We know Rene Bräunlich very well and know that is was only the desire to protect his livelihood and keep his job that caused him to take on such a risky task," members of his soccer club, SV Grün-Weiss Miltitz, said in a statement. In Baiji the two men intended to sleep in a building adjacent to the factory but they were moved to a guesthouse a kilometer away. In Iraq, even that short distance can be deadly. When they drove to work last Tuesday, with an interpreter and an Iraqi driver, they were stopped by at least least six men in Iraqi army uniforms, handcuffed and put in the trunk of a car. The kidnappers let the two others go. The German crisis team is preparing for all possible outcomes. Specialist negotiators from the Federal Criminal Police, Germany's FBI, have traveled to Baghdad and the Jordanian capital Amman. Before thery left they took some personal items belonging to Bräunlich and Nitzsche, such as a toothbrush. For a DNA test in the event of the worst possible outcome. |
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