Bangkok Post

Aid worker kidnapped in Kenya to come home: PM

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MILAN: Silvia Romano, an Italian aid worker who was kidnapped in Kenya 18 months ago, has been freed and was expected back in Italy yesterday, the Italian government announced on Saturday.

“Silvia Romano has been freed. I thank the men and women of the external intelligen­ce service. Silvia, we await for you in Italy!,” Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte wrote on his Twitter account.

Speaking to state broadcaste­r RAI, Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio said Ms Romano was found in Somalia and was released thanks to the external intelligen­ce agency.

“She is now at the Italian embassy in Mogadishu [the Somali capital] and she will arrive in Rome tomorrow on a special flight,” Mr Di Maio said.

Asked about the release, Mr Di Maio said he could not reveal any details.

Italian daily Corriere della Sera reported on its website that Italy paid a ransom to free the woman.

Kenyan government officials were not immediatel­y available to comment on Ms Romano’s release.

Gunmen seized Ms Romano, who was working for an Italian charity called Africa Milele, in northern Kenya in November 2018.

No group claimed responsibi­lity for the kidnapping, which brought fears of an upsurge in attacks by militant Islamists.

Police and residents said at the time that the gunmen seized the young woman from a guesthouse in Chakama, a small town south of the border with Somalia and near the coast.

The Somali militant group alShabaab has periodical­ly staged attacks in Kenya, including an attack in April 2015 which killed 148 people.

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