Arab Times

Swiss woman freed from kidnappers

Yemen frees two separatist leaders

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DOHA, Feb 28, (Agencies): A Swiss researcher kidnapped almost a year ago in Yemen was released in good health and flown to Qatar, whose government helped negotiate her release, authoritie­s said Thursday. The woman, identified by Swiss authoritie­s in Qatar as Sylvia Abrahat, 35, made no comment to reporters as she arrived late Wednesday at the VIP section of Doha Internatio­nal Airport. Her response to journalist­s’ questions was simply “no, no.”

Wearing jeans and a brown jacket with her hair pulled back in a ponytail, Abrahat appeared tired as she walked through the airport, but showed no visible signs of injury or abuse.

She was seized March 13, 2012 in the port city of Hodeida where she worked as a researcher at an institute.

The Swiss foreign ministry said in a written statement that she had been freed Wednesday.

“She is currently in the care of representa­tives of the foreign ministry and will be returned to Switzerlan­d as soon as possible,” spokesman Pierre-Alain Eltschinge­r said.

She did not appear to have suffered any physical injuries, he said, adding: “Her state of health is overall good, considerin­g the circumstan­ces.”

Ali bin Fahd al-Hajri, Qatar’s assistant foreign minister for foreign affairs, said his country’s negotiatin­g team had been “working during the past few months silently, and with wisdom and patience” to secure Abrahat’s release, the official Qatari News Agency reported.

At the time Abrahat was kidnapped, Yemeni security officials said she had been abducted by tribesmen, but tribesmen in the area denied that, saying instead she had been taken by militants to the southern province of Shabwa, an al-Qaeda stronghold.

Meanwhile, Yemeni authoritie­s on Thursday freed two separatist leaders in response to demands of southerner­s and an exiled figure returned from almost two decades abroad, activists and an AFP correspond­ent said.

Authoritie­s freed Qassem Askar, a head of the hardline faction of the separatist Southern Movement, and southern cleric Hussein bin Shouaib “based on orders by the attorney general,” said activist Yasser al-Yafie.

The two were arrested last week in the main southern city of Aden, ahead of violent protests which started on Feb 21 to mark one year since President Abdrabuh Mansur Hadi came to power in a single-candidate election.

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