The Borneo Post

Sudan searching for French hostage

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KHARTOUM: Sudanese security agents have launched a search for an abducted Frenchman after a Chadian minister reported that he was being held in the neighbouri­ng country, Khartoum said on Sunday.

Chadian Security Minister Ahmat Mahamat Bachir said on Friday that a French mining worker who was kidnapped in Chad was now in Sudan.

Sudanese Foreign Minister Ibrahim Ghandour said the powerful National Intelligen­ce and Security Service ( NISS) and the military intelligen­ce had launched an operation to find him.

“They all are working to find the French hostage and return him to his homeland,” Ghandour told the official Suna news agency.

“Khartoum is coordinati­ng with the French intelligen­ce and the government of Chad... We hope to find him soon.”

The man was kidnapped from an area near Goz Beida, about 200 kilometres south of the Chadian city of Abeche, the Chadian minister said on Friday without offering details.

“We are doing everything possible alongside the Chadian authoritie­s to obtain his release,” French Foreign Minister JeanMarc Ayrault told AFP on Friday.

Several French and other Western nationals have been kidnapped by jihadist groups in west and central Africa in recent years. The last such case in Chad – a former French colony – dates back to 2009, when a Frenchman working for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross was abducted by a shadowy armed group called the Freedom Eagles of Africa, based in Sudan’s wartorn Darfur province. He was freed after 89 days. The only known French hostage currently being held anywhere in the world is Sophie Petronin, head of an NGO who was abducted by armed men in the northern Malian town of Gao late last year.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for her disappeara­nce. Chad is one of France’s key African allies in the counter- terror fight, with the capital N’Djamena serving as headquarte­rs for France’s Operation Barkhane anti-jihadist force. — AFP

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