WORLD> Africa
Kidnappers seize group of foreign tourists in Egypt
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-09-22 21:59

CAIRO -- Kidnappers in Egypt have seized 15 hostages including German, Italian and Romanian tourists near the Sudanese border and talks are under way over ransom demands, Egyptian officials said on Monday.


Visitors queue outside the temple of Abu Simbel, Egypt, in this February 22, 2007 file photo. [Agencies] 

The kidnapping was the first of foreign tourists in Egypt in living memory, although Islamic militants have hit the country's tourist industry in recent decades through bomb and shooting attacks that have killed hundreds.

"This is a gang act (by) masked men," Tourism Minister Zoheir Garrana told Reuters, identifying the hostages as five Italians, five Germans, one Romanian and four Egyptians.

He said talks were under way on a ransom to release the hostages, which Egyptian state television said included an Egyptian border guard officer.

Egyptian security sources said the tourists were last seen on Sunday evening in Aswan, whose pharaonic sites are a popular tourist draw. They said they had been due to take part in a desert car and motorcycle rally.

It was not immediately clear if the tourists were taken on Sunday or Monday, security sources said. Based on monitored telephone communications, the group of tourists could have been moved over the border to Sudan, they added.

Italy's foreign ministry confirmed that five Italians were kidnapped. It said it was in contact with other countries involved, but gave no further details.

Attacks targeting tourists in Egypt's Nile Valley have been rare in recent years, although a series of bombings targeted tourists in resorts in the Sinai Peninsula between 2004 and 2006. Egypt blamed the Sinai attacks on a group of Bedouin with militant Islamist views.