One group eyed in two Iraq kidnappings (AP) Updated: 2005-12-02 08:40
Four Christian peace activists held hostage in Iraq were kidnapped at the
same place where an Italian journalist was abducted, raising the possibility one
group carried out both attacks, police said Thursday.
The style of the abduction also was similar: The activists were seized
Saturday in the vicinity of a mosque near Baghdad University. A car blocked
their car, gunmen got out, threw the driver and translator out and drove away
with the four captives, security officials said. They spoke on condition of
anonymity because they are not authorized to talk to the media.
Giuliana Sgrena, a reporter for the Italian newspaper Il Manifesto, was
seized Feb. 4 and held for a month by a group calling itself Mujahedeen Without
Borders. That previously unknown group has not been heard from since, but may
now be using a different name.
The four activists for the Chicago-based Christian Peacemaker Teams were
being held by a group called the Swords of Righteousness Brigade �� another
unfamiliar name. The group claimed that its hostages, shown sitting quietly in a
video, were spies working under the cover of Christian peace activists.
 A video grab taken from Al-Jazeera television
shows two of the four foreigners taken hostage in
Iraq.[AFP/file] | While in captivity, Sgrena also appeared in a video. She begged for her life
and warned foreigners to leave the country.
Iraqi police Lt. Thaer Mahmoud said Thursday that the activists were
kidnapped in the same place as Sgrena, whose release on March 4 touched off a
tragic friendly fire incident that strained relations between Italy and the
United States.
Nicola Calipari, an Italian intelligence agent, was killed by U.S. soldiers
at a checkpoint as he was escorting Sgrena to Baghdad's airport.
Whether or not the same group was holding the Christians, militants in Iraq
are resorting again to a tactic they have not used for months: a succession of
abductions targeting Westerners. Insurgents, including al-Qaida in Iraq, have
seized more than 225 people, killing at least 38.
The latest victims �� five Westerners and four Iranians kidnapped in the past
week �� may have been targets of opportunity, or victims of ransom seekers or lax
security. Either way, the abductions give militants the publicity they seek to
show they are a force to be reckoned with.
"The media card is crucial in any international conflict, and these groups
are seeking to reaffirm their existence through such kidnappings," said Diaa
Rashwan, an Egyptian expert on Islamic militancy.
The new abductions of Westerners comes after a monthslong hiatus. The
gruesome killings of past hostages have brought criticism from many Arabs.
Influential Egyptian cleric Sheik Youssef al-Qaradawi issued a fatwa saying that
since Iraq remains in a state of war, the kidnapping of those involved in the
war is allowed but hostages should not be killed.
That view is reportedly shared by the second-in-command of al-Qaida, Ayman
al-Zawahri. The Pentagon said in October that the military in Iraq had
intercepted a letter from al-Zawahri to Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, urging him to avoid bombing mosques and slaughtering hostages to
avoid alienating the public.
In the latest known kidnapping, six Iranians were grabbed Nov. 29 in Balad,
north of Baghdad. Iranian state TV said a day later that two Iranian women had
been freed; four men apparently remain captive.
The abduction of the Iranians came four days after the disappearance of
German archaeologist Susanne Osthoff, 43. On a video made public Nov. 29,
kidnappers threatened to kill her unless Germany stops dealing with the Iraqi
government. Osthoff, who speaks Arabic, had helped distribute aid in Iraq.
In a message shown Thursday on Germany's ZDF television, Osthoff's sister and
mother pleaded with the kidnappers to consider that their captive was a Muslim
convert with a young daughter as well as a friend of Iraq.
"My sister has lived in your country for a long time and has committed
herself to Iraq. Susanne has brought medicine to ill people. She loves the great
Iraqi culture. She wanted to preserve the treasures of Iraq for the Iraqi
people," Anja Osthoff said.
The Christian activists �� Tom Fox, 54, of Clear Brook, Va.; Norman Kember,
74, of London; James Loney, 41, of Toronto; and Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32, of
Canada �� had been repeatedly warned by Iraqi and Western security officials that
they were taking a grave risk by moving about Baghdad without bodyguards.
Osthoff also traveled without security guards, and the Berlin newspaper
Tagesspiegel reported Thursday that she had told Iraqi authorities about her
travel plans and that someone in the security services may have tipped off
kidnappers.
Some security experts believe the surge of kidnappings may be a result of lax
security, attempts by the insurgents to mix up tactics in an intense period of
car bombings and suicide attacks �� or a desire to disrupt next month's
elections.
The recent spate may also be pure coincidence, some analysts say.
"It depends on the availability of victims for kidnapping," said Bruce
Hoffman, a terrorism expert at the RAND Corp. in Washington.
Rashwan said there "may not be any kind of rationalization or strategy to
what the insurgents are doing."
"It could be that they did not have enough ... human resources in the past
few months, or that kidnapping was not a top priority," Rashwan said.
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