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Entrance To Where Hostages Were Held; Photo Credit: AFP |
Credit:
AFP
Plans to free two Western hostages
were well underway when they were killed during a failed rescue bid in Nigeria,
a spokesman for the kidnappers told the Mauritanian news agency ANI.
The spokesman for a splinter cell of
radical Islamist sect Boko Haram claims his group was negotiating the release
of the British and Italian hostages and had reached an agreement with their
families that excluded government involvement.
However a senior government source
in London on Sunday denied there was any such plan, saying the rescue operation
had been the best option.
"The kidnappers had established
contact with the family of the British hostage and had begun negotiations
asking for a five million euro ($6.5 million) ransom and the freedom of certain
prisoners," the Islamist spokesman said Saturday.
The online news agency ANI often
publishes reliable information on radical Islamist groups in west Africa. In
December, it released a video in which gunmen threatened to kill one of the
hostages if their demands were not met.
The spokesman added that the family
of the Italian hostage had entered the negotiations in which both families had
been provided with evidence that the hostages were still alive.
He said the kidnappers had
"proved their flexibility: They accepted to add the Italian to the
agreement without supplementary demands and gave up their demand that detained
Islamists in the region be freed".
He said the parties had finally
agreed on a ransom of 1.2 million euros, and no government intervention.
"A tiny part of this ransom had
already been paid a few days earlier and the rest was to come," he added.
Italian engineer Franco Lamolinara,
48, and his British colleague Chris McManus, 28, were killed during the failed
rescue bid authorised by British Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday.
Boko Haram, blamed for scores of
deadly attacks in recent months, has denied responsibility for the abductions.
The splinter group's spokesman said
the two hostages were to be released by their kidnappers to intermediaries.
"But British and Nigerian
secret services exploited the exchanges between the two parties to pinpoint
where the hostages were being held to launch a commando operation to free them.
"The group then reacted swiftly
to this plan by eliminating the two hostages," he said, adding Britain had
been threatened with a "painful response".
ANI says the group holding the
hostages was led by Khaled Al-Barnaoui of Niger, one of the first from his
country to join the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) which became
AQIM after aligning with Al-Qaeda in 2007.
On Thursday morning Nigerian
security forces, supported by British agents, carried out their ultimately
failed operation in a house in Sokoto in the extreme northwest of Nigeria where
the hostages had been held since May.
"There was never any coherent
demand, no request for money and no indication that the hostages would be
released," a senior British government official said on condition of
anonymity.
"The situation on Thursday was
that their lives were under immediate and growing threat and it was likely they
would be killed if we didn't act within that window. It was a difficult
decision but the right one."
A spokesman for Britain's Foreign
Office reiterated the country's stance of not giving concessions, including
ransoms, to hostage takers.
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