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Sahara tourists set free

The four Swiss hostages have been released after five months Keystone Archive

Fourteen European tourists – including four Swiss – have been freed in the western African nation of Mali, after being held hostage in the Sahara desert for more than five months.

After a day of uncertainty the Swiss foreign ministry confirmed news of their release on Monday night.

“We have been informed that the hostages have been handed over to the Malian government,” Simon Hubacher of the Swiss foreign ministry told swissinfo.

“They were released on Monday afternoon and the Malian government told us that all 14 people are in good health.”

He added that the hostages were due to arrive in the capital Bamako on Tuesday morning and he expected them to arrive in Zurich on Tuesday evening.

The foreign ministry’s confirmation came shortly after Mali’s government announced that the hostages had been freed.

“We confirm officially that they have been released, all the hostages,” Seydou Sissouma told the Reuters news agency.

Intense negotiations

Negotiations between the kidnappers – believed to be the Algerian militant group, the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) – and German officials have been widely reported in recent weeks.

The hostages were part of a group of 32 European tourists seized in separate incidents in late February and early March while travelling without guides in southern Algeria.

Seventeen hostages were freed in May when Algerian commandos stormed a desert hideout belonging to the GSPC, killing all the kidnappers.

The head of a Swiss crisis group, Peter Sutter, and the German deputy foreign minister, Jürgen Chrobog, arrived in Mali on Sunday in anticipation of the hostages’ release.

There had been much speculation that Berlin was discussing ransom demands of several million Swiss francs with the kidnappers.

Officials declined to give details about the terms of the hostages’ release.

Disappearance

The four Swiss went missing in Algeria in late February, after travelling into the Sahara desert without a guide.

In late July, it emerged that they – along with nine Germans and a Dutch national – had been taken to neighbouring Mali by their kidnappers.

German officials confirmed newspaper reports that one hostage – a 45-year-old German woman – had died of heatstroke while in captivity and was buried by her captors.

The hostages’ release ends a gruelling five-month hunt for the group, involving Algerian, Malian, Swiss and German investigators.

In July, Switzerland sent a police officer to Mali to join around a dozen Dutch and German experts, who had been working on the case there. A second officer was dispatched to Mali in August.

swissinfo with agencies

February 22/23: Last contact with 11 tourists in southern Algeria – six German, four Swiss and one Dutch national.
March 17: A second and third group of tourists are reported missing.
March 30: A fourth group consisting of five Germans and one Swede is reported missing.
April 2: Four more German tourists disappear.
April 11: Two more Austrians go missing in the Sahara.
April 28: Clothing and other items belonging to the tourists are found.
May 4: Algeria confirms that the tourists are alive.
May 6: Authorities in Algeria deny negotiating the hostages’ release with the kidnappers.
May 7: Some 5,000 Algerian troops comb the Sahara in search of the missing tourists.
May 10: A Swiss foreign ministry official meets Algerian counterparts to press for more information.
May 13: 17 hostages – ten Austrians, six Germans and one Swede – are released.
August 18: The remaining 14 hostages are freed and are due to head to the capital Bamako before returning home.

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SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR