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Italian aid worker kidnapped in Afghanistan
Gunmen kidnapped an Italian aid worker on Monday in the center of the Afghan capital, Kabul, security officials said. A senior official at the Italian Foreign Ministry in Rome identified the woman as Clementina Cantoni from Lombardy. She works for the CARE International aid agency, a U.N. official in Kabul said. Cantoni was seized near a park at about 8.30 p.m. (1600 GMT) after the vehicle she was traveling in was intercepted and blocked by another car, an Afghan security official said.
She was bundled into a white Toyota car and driven away, a Western security official said. There was no word on any demands. Three U.N. workers were kidnapped in Kabul in October and held for 27 days before being released unharmed.
Cantoni was traveling with two other people when their vehicle was intercepted and stopped but the others managed to escape, Italy's ANSA news agency said. An Italian embassy official said the mission was in contact with the relevant authorities. He declined to give details. The district in Kabul where Cantoni was kidnapped has several guest houses and restaurants that are popular with foreigners. A bomb attack in an Internet cafe in the area on May 8 killed three people, including a U.N. worker from Myanmar. Cantoni's family wished for a speedy and happy ending, ANSA said. "The only thing we want to say is that we hope this finishes quickly and happily," ANSA quoted a family friend as saying in a statement. WARNINGS While Kabul is much safer than Baghdad, aid agencies have issued warnings to staff to keep a low profile in recent weeks following two unsuccessful attempts to kidnap foreigners. Embassies also urge vigilance. In April, an American man was bundled into the boot of a car but managed to jump out. In another incident, a car carrying foreigners was intercepted by gunmen but the driver reversed away and escaped. A British adviser to the government was shot dead near a U.N. guest house in March. The Afghan government said the kidnapping of the three U.N. election workers in October was by a gang of criminals who could have been hired by a Taliban splinter faction that threatened to kill them unless Taliban prisoners were freed. Taliban guerrillas have attacked and killed dozens of aid and election workers since launching an insurgency after they were forced from power by U.S.-led forces in 2001 for refusing to hand over Osama bin Laden. But most of their attacks have been in the countryside, particularly in the south and east. |
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