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Egyptian takes four German tourists hostage
By Khaled Diab
Cairo, March 13, 2001 (Reuters) – An Egyptian tour guide has taken four German tourists hostage in southern Egypt to try to use them as bargaining chips in a child-custody dispute with his German wife, said Egypt's interior ministry.
A ministry statement named those held as Marco
Vidkind, Ralph Laver, Kristof Paning and Peter Nowotnick, saying that they had
arrived in Egypt on March 6.
“On March 12, the German embassy received a telephone
call from Ibrahim Ali, in which he said that he had kidnapped four German
tourists in Luxor and threatened not to release them until his children Kerim,
seven, and Rami, three, who are in Germany with his German wife Heike Ritter,
are returned,” it said.
Four Germans were being held by an armed man who speaks
fluent German. The statement said the couple had married in 1991 and lived in
the Delta governorate of Menoufiya north of Cairo.
Ritter left for Germany about 18 months ago after
obtaining German passports for the children without Ali's permission.
It said the German embassy had turned down several
visa requests from Ali who wanted to visit his children.
In Berlin, foreign ministry spokesperson Andreas
Michaelis confirmed that four Germans were being held by an armed man who
speaks fluent German.
He said the man had telephoned the German embassy in
Cairo on Monday morning demanding that his two children be brought to Egypt in
return for the hostages.
“They will act very prudently and in a considered way
in this matter.”
The children are now in Germany with their mother, who
won a German court ruling in January giving her temporary custody.
The man has threatened the hostages, who are tied up
but who have spoken by telephone to German diplomats, he said.
“Under the circumstances, they are well,” Michaelis
said. “He is clearly very emotional,” he said of their captor.
Security sources said Ali, a guide in the southern
tourist resort of Luxor, abducted the four men, earlier reported to be women,
on Monday, in the Luxor area.
They said the hostages were being held in the town of
Esna, 45km south of Luxor, though the ministry statement did not confirm this.
Esna is the site of a the Greco-Roman temple of Khnum
often visited by tourists cruising the Nile between Aswan and Luxor.
The German foreign ministry has set up a crisis
reaction centre to deal with the problem and Germany has offered Egypt the
assistance of its GSG-9 elite anti-guerrilla commandos, but the offer has for
now been refused, said Michaelis.
"We have, however, an assurance from the
Egyptians that they will act very prudently and in a considered way in this
matter and that every step will be agreed with the German government."
It was the first security incident involving foreign
tourists in Egypt since Muslim militants killed 58 foreign visitors at Queen
Hatshepsut temple in Luxor in November, 1997.
Update 4 – Egyptian holds
four Germans in row over children
By Khaled Diab
CAIRO, March 13, 2001 (Reuters) - An Egyptian tour
guide has taken four German tourists hostage in southern Egypt to try to use
them as bargaining chips in a child-custody dispute with his German wife,
Egypt's Interior Ministry said on Tuesday.
However the alleged kidnapper told
Abu Dhabi television in a telephone interview that the four had volunteered to
help him recover his children and were free to move around.
A ministry statement named those
held as Marco Vidkind, Ralph Laver, Kristof Paning and Peter Nowotnick, saying
that they had arrived in Egypt on March 6.
“On March 12, the German embassy
received a telephone call from Ibrahim Ali, in which he said that he had
kidnapped four German tourists in Luxor and threatened not to release them
until his children Kerim, seven, and Rami, three, who are in Germany with his German
wife Heike Ritter, are returned,” it said.
The statement said the couple had
married in 1991 and lived in the Delta governorate of Menoufiya north of Cairo.
Ritter left for Germany about 18 months ago after obtaining German passports
for the children without Ali's permission.
It said the German embassy had turned down several visa requests from Ali, who
wanted to visit his children.
One of the hostages, Kristof Paning,
told Abu Dhabi television in a telephone interview conducted in German but
translated into Arabic, that the tour guide was armed and urged authorities to
accept his demands.
“We are being held in a relatively
small but comfortable room. I can say that our condition is well. We are
getting food and are free to move around. We are being treated well by the
kidnapper,” Paning said
He said Ali was armed with grenades
and a pistol and that the situation was “a little tense, and thus we demand
that his demands be met”.
EGYPTIAN SECURITY FORCES 'TO DEAL WITH MATTER'
Egyptian state television news said
security forces were going to deal with the matter “in a way that would
guarantee the safety of the hostages”.
A Luxor security source said the
hostages were being held at a house in El Karnak, site of a Pharaonic temple
just north of Luxor. He said he expected the ordeal to be over within hours.
The interior ministry statement did
not confirm the location and security sources had early said the hostages were
being held in the town of Esna, south of Luxor.
The source said state security forces
were negotiating with the man and were close to the house but maintaining a
discreet distance.
In Berlin, Foreign Ministry
spokesman Andreas Michaelis confirmed that four Germans were being held by an
armed man speaking fluent German.
DEMAND HIS CHILDREN RETURN TO EGYPT
He said the man had telephoned the German embassy in Cairo on Monday
morning demanding that his two children be brought to Egypt in return for the
hostages. The children are now in Germany with their mother, who won a German
court ruling in January giving her temporary custody.
The man has threatened the hostages,
who are tied up but have spoken by telephone to German diplomats, he said.
“Under the circumstances, they are well,” Michaelis said. “He is clearly very
emotional,” he said of their captor.
In his interview with Abu Dhabi
television Ali appeared to deny he was holding the Germans against their will,
saying: “They are not hostages. They came voluntarily.”
“They learned about my case. They
learned that the German embassy was refusing to give me a visa to see my
children and they suggested to help me, to contact the German embassy and to
say that they had been kidnapped,” he said.
“They consider it a kidnapping, I
don't. They are friends,” he added.
Asked to comment on the kidnapper's
remarks, Paning said: “I cannot respond to this question, but what I want to
say is that we understand the human situation in which our kidnapper is in and
which pushed him to do such an act.
“Our kidnapper is eager to see his
children, but we cannot understand his move to kidnap us,” Paning added.
The German Foreign Ministry has set
up a crisis reaction centre to deal with the problem and Germany has offered
Egypt the assistance of its GSG-9 elite anti-guerrilla commandos, but the offer
has for now been refused, Michaelis said.
“We have, however, an assurance from
the Egyptians that they will act very prudently and in a considered way in this
matter and that every step will be agreed with the German government.”
It was the first security incident
involving foreign tourists in Egypt since Muslim militants killed 58 foreign
visitors at Queen Hatshepsut temple in Luxor in November, 1997. (Additional
reporting by Sami Aboudi, Dubai).
Egyptian holds four Germans in child custody row
By Khaled Diab
LUXOR, Egypt, March 14 (Reuters) - Security forces
were negotiating with a tour guide holding four German tourists in southern
Egypt in a child-custody dispute with his German wife, security sources said
late on Tuesday.
The man, however, told Abu Dhabi television in a telephone interview that the
four had volunteered to help him recover his children and were free to move
around. A German government spokesman said they were tied up but relatively
well.
Egypt's interior ministry in a statement named the kidnapper as Ibrahim Ali and
those held as Marco Vidkind, Ralph Laver, Kristof Paning and Peter Nowotnick.
Paning, in an phoned interview with Abu Dhabi television, said: “We are being
held in a relatively small but comfortable room. I can say that our condition
is well. We are getting food and are free to move around. We are being treated
well by the kidnapper.”
He said Ali was armed and the
situation tense but refused to comment on their exact status, saying: “I cannot
respond to this question, but what I want to say is that we understand the
human situation in which our kidnapper is in and which pushed him to do such an
act.”
The interior ministry said Ali had
phoned the German embassy in Cairo on March 12 saying he had kidnapped four
German tourists in Luxor and “threatened not to release them until his children
Kerim, seven, and Rami, three, who are in Germany with his German wife Heike
Ritter, are returned.”
Ritter left for Germany about 18
months ago after obtaining German passports for the children without Ali's
permission.
The ministry said the German embassy had turned down several visa requests from
Ali, who wanted to visit his children.
ALLEGED KIDNAPPER "A KIND MAN"
Ahmed Mikkawi, branch manager of tourism firm Cairo Express at the Gaddis
Hotel in Luxor, where Ali works, told Reuters he did not believe that his
colleague, whom he last saw three days ago, was involved in kidnapping.
“He is not a kidnapper... He is just
going through a personal crisis,” he said.
“They (Ali and the hostages) might
be working together,” he added. “He is a kind man, this wasn't planned.”
Egyptian state television news said
security forces were going to deal with the matter “in a way that would
guarantee the safety of the hostages”.
In Berlin, Foreign Ministry spokesman
Andreas Michaelis said the man had telephoned the embassy on Monday demanding
his two children be brought to Egypt in return for the hostages.
Their mother won a German court
ruling in January giving her temporary custody, Michaelis said, adding that
those held had spoken by telephone to German diplomats.
“Under the circumstances, they are
well," Michaelis said. "He is clearly very emotional,” he said of
their captor.
Michaelis said Germany had “an assurance from the Egyptians that they will act
very prudently and in a considered way in this matter and that every step will
be agreed with the German government.” (Additional reporting by Sami Aboudi,
Dubai).
Update 4 – Egyptian police bide time with captor of
Germans
By Khaled Diab
But one of the hostages, contacted by a German newspaper, voiced fears of a
lethal shootout if police stormed the hideout of the kidnapper, identified as
Ibrahim Ali, 45.
”Ibrahim is thorough. He means what he says. I am afraid that the whole thing
here is escalating. He is armed,” Christoph Paning, 48, from Muenster, told
Cologne's Express newspaper in a call via the kidnapper's mobile telephone.
“Why is everyone playing for time? If the Egyptian police raid the apartment we
will all die in a hail of bullets,” the paper, to be published on Thursday,
quoted Paning as saying.
Ali, a tourism company employee in the southern resort of Luxor, has held
Paning and fellow hostages Marco Wedekind, Ralf Laue and Peter Nowotnick, since
Monday.
Express quoted Ali as saying the
hostages would die unless he was given access to his children.
“I don't want to harm anyone. But if
I don't see my children, then I have nothing to lose. The hostages will die
then,” Ali told the mass circulation daily.
“I love my children more than
anything, give my life for them. I talked with my wife. She wants to come here
with the children. But the authorities don't want that. I am forced to do this
here because the authorities in Germany are not reasonable,” he said.
CRISIS DRAGS ON
There was little indication of how
the three-day-old stand-off between Egyptian security services and the
sleep-deprived kidnapper might be resolved.
“Nothing new has come up,” Ali told
Reuters in a late afternoon mobile telephone call. But in an apparent sign that
negotiations were continuing, he asked journalists to stop calling him to avoid
blocking other calls.
Witnesses said high-ranking Egyptian security officials had arrived in Luxor to
be briefed first-hand on the drama.
A police officer said earlier that the hostages had been located. “We hope the
matter will end within hours.”
The official, who asked not to be
named, refused to disclose where the Germans were being held, saying their
safety was paramount. “We don't want anything to jeopardise them.”
Ali said his estranged wife Heike Ritter had telephoned him from Germany on
Wednesday to tell him she was planning to fly to Egypt with their two children,
but gave no details.
A local government official, Mahmoud
Khalaf, the head of the High Council of Luxor, told Egypt's state Middle East
News Agency that he expected the hostages to be released soon.
Ali said earlier that he had tried
repeatedly to get a visa to visit his children Kerim, seven, and Rami, three,
but had been told that his wife, who won temporary custody from a German court
in January, would have to write inviting him to come.
KIDNAPPER BLAMES GERMANY
“I don't object to the mother's custody of the children, I object to a German
court deciding the fate of Egyptian children,” the exhausted kidnapper said
angrily.
“The authorities were afraid I would
take the children back to Egypt and keep them there, but all I wanted was
access to my children. After all these rejections, I have no choice but to
demand nothing less than their return,” he declared.
A spokesman for the German Foreign Ministry in Berlin declined to comment on
the hostage-taker's accusations. “At the current moment, one is not giving any
details about the status of the negotiations and thus not making any comment about
the Egyptian's position,” the spokesman said.
He said Germany's federal police
were leading the negotiations in coordination with the foreign ministry.
Ali called the German embassy in
Cairo on Monday saying he had kidnapped the tourists to force the return of his
children, taken to Germany by his wife about 18 months ago.
A German diplomat said that although
Ali had asked the Cairo embassy several times in the past nine months how he
could get his children back, he had never applied for a visa.
“By what right does the German
government refuse to let me see my children?” Ali asked in a voice cracking
with emotion.
“Where is the justice in them not
permitting Egyptian children to leave Germany and return to their father? How
can they separate a father from his children?”
German Hostages Back in Cairo After Release
By Khaled
Diab
Airport sources said the four men, accompanied by a state security team, landed in a private plane at Cairo international airport and were whisked away to an undisclosed location.
Egypt's official
Middle East News Agency quoted a German embassy spokesman as saying the four
would be flown home within hours. He said they had earlier been taken to a
Luxor hospital to rest after their release at about 3 a.m. (0100 GMT). The
ex-hostages were tired, but in good health.
Christoph
Paning, Marco Wedekind, Ralf Laue and Peter Nowotnick were abducted on Monday
by an Egyptian tour company employee who sought to use them as pawns in a child
custody battle with his estranged German wife.
Security
sources said the kidnapper surrendered to police without a struggle early on
Thursday and was taken into custody.
“The
hostages were taken by German consular officials and psychologists from Luxor
to Cairo. From there they are to return home as soon as possible. The procedure
will depend on Egyptian authorities, who will certainly want to question the
released hostages,” a German foreign ministry spokesman said.
The
kidnapper, identified as Ibrahim Ali, 45, was trying to force the return of his
two children from Germany. He kept the hostages in his apartment in the village
of Karnak, near Luxor.
The hostage
drama ended only hours after German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder telephoned
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to discuss efforts to free the four Germans.
They had
been cooped up since Monday in Ali's cramped first-floor rented flat
overlooking a brickyard in a shabby residential area. Police sealed off the
apartment after the hostages left and guarded the dilapidated concrete house.
“We only saw
the hostages as they were leaving,” Ali's landlady, Negah Kamel Ahmed, told
Reuters. She described the kidnapper as a private man who kept to himself.
“About six days ago he asked my son to go out and buy him supplies like mineral
water and cigarettes because he said he wouldn't be leaving the house for three
or four days,” she said.
Ali said by
telephone on Wednesday that his wife Heike Ritter had telephoned him from
Germany that day to tell him she was planning to fly to Egypt with their two
children, but gave no details.
He said
earlier that he had tried repeatedly to get a visa to visit his children Kerim,
seven, and Rami, three, but had been told that his wife, who won temporary
custody from a German court in January, would have to write inviting him to
come. “I don't object to the mother's custody of the children, I object to a
German court deciding the fate of Egyptian children,” the exhausted man said
angrily.
“The
authorities were afraid I would take the children back to Egypt and keep them
there, but all I wanted was access to my children. After all these rejections,
I have no choice but to demand nothing less than their return.”
There was no
immediate word on whether Egyptian negotiators had struck a deal with Ali or
what charges he would face.
ã Reuters Limited
2001.
ã2004 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.