• RSS Somali VOA

    • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
  • Soo Raac

  • Sawiro Xusuus Leh

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 49 other subscribers
  • your IP adress

    IP address
  • Archives

Medecins du Monde announces the release of its two volunteers, Keiko Akahane and Wilhem Sools, abducted on September 22, 2008 in Ethiopia and held in Somalia.


Free A Japanese doctor and a Dutch nurse kidnapped in Somalia last September while Working for a French medical charity have been freed, the organisation has said.

Medecins du Monde announces the release of its two volunteers, Keiko Akahane And Wilhem Sools, abducted on September 22, 2008 in Ethiopia and held in Somalia. They were freed at midday (0900 GMT) and are safe.

The agency welcomes the release and expresses solidarity with other people still Being held in Somalia and calls for their quick release,” the Paris-based charity said in a statement on its website on Wednesday.

A Somali armed group that snatched the pair in a drought-stricken village in Ethiopia had demanded three million dollars in ransom, but the agency did not say Whether any money was paid for their freedom. Dutch Foreign Minister Maxime Verhagen expressed delight at news of the pair’s release, adding that Dutchman Sools

And his Japanese colleague Akahane appeared to be in good health.Minister Verhagen is happy for Mr Sools and his Family that this difficult period is now over,” a foreign ministry Statement said, while also praising Medecins du Monde’s Ardent efforts” to secure their release.

Akahane’s mother Chieko told the Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) that she was relieved to hear of the release but would only feel at ease when she saw her daughter.

Japanese Foreign Minister Hirofumi Nakasone also welcomed the news while urging nationals to refrain from visiting trouble spots around the world.

I am delighted and congratulate Ms. Akahane, her family and others concerned,” Nakasone said in a statement.

Armed gangs have carried out scores of kidnappings across the lawless Horn of Africa country, often targeting either foreigners or Somalis working with international organisations to demand ransoms.

At the weekend, two foreign journalists, a Briton and a Spaniard were freed after almost six weeks in captivity in Somalia’s breakaway Puntland state.

On Tuesday, gunmen killed a Somali aid worker with the World Food Programme (WFP) in the violence-plagued nation’s southern Gedo region, making him the agency’s third worker to be slain in since August 2008.

In November, gunmen raided an airstrip in central Somalia and kidnapped four foreign aid workers with the French NGO Action Contre la Faim (ACF – Action Against Hunger) and their two pilots.

Aid organisations have warned that one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises is unfolding in Somalia and complained that attacks and kidnappings had made their operations virtually impossible to sustain.

According to the WFP, 3.25 million of Somalia’s 10 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance.Somalia has lacked an effective government and any credible centralised security apparatus since the 1991 ouster of former president Mohamad Siad Barre touched off a bloody power struggle.

Leave a comment