Italian aid workers held hostage in Syria freed

ROME - Two Italian aid workers taken hostage in Syria five months ago have been released and will soon return home, Italy’s government said on Thursday.
‘Vanessa Marzullo and Greta Ramelli are free and will soon return to Italy,’ read a Tweet from Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s office. Renzi’s spokesman also confirmed the news. No details about their release were provided. Some Italian media reported that the two young women would be flown out of Turkey on Friday.
In August, Italy’s Foreign Ministry said the pair were taken hostage while seeking to provide healthcare assistance in the embattled northern city of Aleppo. Two weeks ago, their captors released a threatening video online demanding that the government intervene to bring them home. The video said they were being detained by al Qaeda’s Syria wing, the Nusra Front.
‘We are in big danger and we could be killed. The government and its militaries are responsible (for) our lives,’ one of the women said in English, appearing to read from a statement. Nusra Front and the militant Islamic State group have held groups of Westerners hostage in Syria, which has descended into a splintered and prolonged civil war. Islamic State beheaded several male hostages including aid workers and journalists in 2014. Nusra Front released other hostages last year, including a group of Greek Orthodox nuns in March and a U.S. writer in August.
While,  Italy said that a 12-million-euro ransom was paid to free two aid workers kidnapped in Syria were ‘baseless’, following public criticism, but did not deny directly that a payment had been made.
Vanessa Marzullo and Greta Ramelli were kidnapped in July while volunteering as healthcare assistants in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.
They returned home on Friday. News of their return was greeted with applause in parliament but also drew unusually heavy criticism from opposition politicians after Arab media reports suggested a ransom of 12 million euros ($14 million) may have been paid to al Qaeda’s Syrian wing, the Nusra Front.
Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni dismissed the reports, which he said may have been circulated by the kidnappers. ‘It surprises me that this conjecture from these sources was given credibility by some without any confirmation,’ he told parliament. He said the government’s approach was in line with the long-standing policy of successive Italian governments and Italy had acted in respect of internationally recognised rules.
‘We are against paying ransoms,’ he said, but added: ‘When it comes to Italians taken hostage, our priority is focused on saving their lives and the physical integrity of our compatriots.’ The issue has taken on unusual prominence a week after Islamist gunmen killed 17 people in Paris and a day after Belgian police killed two men during a raid on an apparently separate Islamist group.
Lucio Malan, a senior member of the centre-right Forza Italia party, said the government should explain whether a ransom had been paid. If a ransom were paid ‘to save two valuable lives, then thousands of others - equally valuable - would be put at risk,’ Malan said in a statement. A ransom payment ‘would encourage terrorists, illegitimate entities like the so-called caliphate and simple criminals to take Italians hostage, wherever they may be,’ Malan said. The leader of the opposition Northern League party Matteo Salvini said on Twitter: ‘If the government really paid a ransom of 12 million to free the two friends of the Syrians, it would be disgusting!’ European governments including Italy have long tolerated or facilitated ransom payments to secure the release of hostages although the practice has frequently been denied officially. A report in the New York Times last year said al Qaeda and its affiliates had made at least $125 million from kidnap ransoms since 2008, most from European governments making payments through proxies.



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