Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Held Austrian extremist released

Austrian authoritie­s thanked Qatar, the gas-rich Gulf emirate, for aiding Fritz’s release and said he may receive medical care in Doha before flying home

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An Austrian far-right extremist who visited Afghanista­n reportedly to prove it was a safe country was released on Sunday after nine months in detention there.

Herbert Fritz, 84, who according to Austrian media has close links to the far-right extremist scene, arrived in the Qatari capital Doha after being freed by Taliban authoritie­s.

Fritz was arrested in May after defying Austria’s long-standing warning against travel to Afghanista­n, which in 2021 returned to the rule of the Taliban who imposed a strict interpreta­tion of Islam.

“I think it was bad luck but I want to visit again,” he told reporters on arrival in Doha, when asked about his ordeal.

“There were some nice people but there were some foolish people also, I’m sorry,” Fritz added, describing his captors.

Austrian authoritie­s thanked Qatar, the gas-rich Gulf emirate, for aiding Fritz’s release and said he may receive medical care in Doha before flying home.

The Taliban government’s interior and foreign ministries did not respond to a request for comment.

According to Austrian newspaper Der Standard, one of Fritz’s passions was visiting “dangerous” places, including Afghanista­n in the 1980s and eastern Ukraine in recent years.

Trying to prove that Taliban-ruled Afghanista­n is safe, he travelled there last year and published an article titled “Vacations with the Taliban” via a far-right media outlet.

He was arrested shortly afterwards on suspicion of espionage, Der Standard said. Such travel reports might have been a bid to portray Afghanista­n as a safe country to return Afghan refugees to, the newspaper added.

In the past, according to Austrian media, Fritz has met Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan — currently jailed in Turkey.

He also reportedly visited fighters of the People’s Protection Units, the main component of the Syrian Democratic Forces, the de facto army of the Kurdish semi-autonomous administra­tion in Syria’s northeast.

Turkey views the YPG as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party — a group designated by Ankara and many of its Western allies as a terrorist organizati­on.

 ?? KARIM JAAFAR/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? AUSTRIAN far-right activist Herbert Fitz (center) is met by Faisal bin Abdullah Al Hanzab, Special Envoy of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the State of Qatar (left) and Special Advisor of the Austrian Chancellor Peter LaunskyTie­ffenthal (right) at Doha Internatio­nal Airport on 25 February 2024, following his release from detention in Afghanista­n, where he was arrested by the Taliban. Fritz, who visited Afghanista­n reportedly to prove it was safe to send back refugees was released on 25 February after nine months in detention there.
KARIM JAAFAR/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE AUSTRIAN far-right activist Herbert Fitz (center) is met by Faisal bin Abdullah Al Hanzab, Special Envoy of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the State of Qatar (left) and Special Advisor of the Austrian Chancellor Peter LaunskyTie­ffenthal (right) at Doha Internatio­nal Airport on 25 February 2024, following his release from detention in Afghanista­n, where he was arrested by the Taliban. Fritz, who visited Afghanista­n reportedly to prove it was safe to send back refugees was released on 25 February after nine months in detention there.
 ?? SERGEI SUPINSKY/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? UKRAINE’s president Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference during the ‘Ukraine Year 2024’ forum in Kyiv on 25 February 2024, marking the second anniversar­y of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
SERGEI SUPINSKY/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE UKRAINE’s president Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference during the ‘Ukraine Year 2024’ forum in Kyiv on 25 February 2024, marking the second anniversar­y of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

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