At least 20mn euro ransom paid for French hostages
BAMAKO (AFP) – A ransom of at least 20 million euros was paid to
secure the release of four Frenchmen freed after three years of
captivity in Niger, a source close to the talks said on Wednesday.
The
four Frenchmen held captive by an Al-Qaeda offshoot in North Africa
arrived in Paris on Wednesday, ending their three-year kidnap ordeal.
A
French government plane carrying the four touched down near Paris at
1045 GMT at the Villacoublay military airport, where the ex-hostages
were to be met by their families and President Francois Hollande.
“Between
20 and 25 million euros was paid to obtain the release of the French
hostages,” the source close to the Nigerien negotiating team said.
The
money went to the hostage-takers and to intermediaries on the ground
who played a key role in securing the release, the source added.
Le
Monde newspaper also cited a French source with knowledge of the
operation as saying that “more than 20 million euros” was paid as a
ransom.
A Malian negotiator who participated in 2011 talks to
release three hostages kidnapped at the same time as the quartet freed
on Tuesday said that 13.5 million euros had been paid on that occasion.
“So for me, between 20 and 25 million euros seems a good figure,” he told AFP.
The
four men, who were kidnapped by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)
in northern Niger in 2010, arrived in Paris around 1045 GM
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