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Hostages homecoming

October 29, 2013

Four French hostages held by al Qaeda’s North African wing have returned to France after being freed in Niger. Paris denied that it had either paid a ransom or launched a military assault to free them.

https://p.dw.com/p/1A8oq
Former French hostage Daniel Larribe (R) is welcomed by relatives next to French President Francois Hollande (L) on the tarmac upon their arrival at Villacoublay military airport, near Paris, October 30, 2013. Four Frenchmen Pierre Legrand, Daniel Larribe, Thierry Dol and Marc Feret held hostage in the Sahara desert by al Qaeda-linked gunmen for three years left Niger on a French government plane on Wednesday morning. The men, who were kidnapped in 2010 while working for French nuclear group Areva and a subsidiary of construction group Vinci in northern Niger, were freed on Tuesday after secret talks. REUTERS/Jacky Naegelen (FRANCE - Tags: POLITICS TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
Image: Reuters

All four hostages arrived at an airport outside Paris on Wednesday after leaving Niger on a French government airplane. French President Francois Hollande joined family and friends of the four men on the tarmac in Paris to welcome them home.

The hostages - Pierre Legrand, Daniel Larribe, Thierry Dol and Marc Feret - were taken by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in September 2010.

Although the conditions for the release were not immediately apparent, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius denied that any ransom had been paid. He said the hostages were "in good shape" now that "the nightmare is over."

AQIM had demanded at least 90 million euros ($124 million) for the release of the three hostages.

France's Le Monde newspaper, citing sources close to the negotiations, reported on Wednesday that 20 million euros had been paid as ransom.

'No raid took place'

Minister of Defence Jean-Yves Le Drian also denied that a ransom had been paid and that it had been down to a process of negotiation, adding that no military action had been taken.

"There was no assault. There was an initiative taken by the networks of [Niger President Mahamadou Issoufou] which permitted a liberation without clashes," Le Drian told the French television network TF1.

The four - who range in age from 28 to 62 - had been working for the French nuclear firm Areva and a subsidiary of the construction group Vinci. They were kidnapped from a uranium compound in Arlit, in north-central Niger.

The four were said to have been taken for some time to northern Mali, which had been occupied for several months by Islamist militants.

Three other people who were kidnapped at the time, Laribbe's wife Francoise as well as a Togolese citizen and a Madagascan, were all freed in February 2011.

While Hollande has officially ended a policy of paying ransoms, suspicions remain that it still goes on and are a source of tension between Paris and Washington.

rc,mz/ccp (AFP, AP, dpa)