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Kidnapped UN workers released in Somalia (Roundup)
Mar 16, 2009, 20:45 GMT
Nairobi/Mogadishu/New York - Gunmen late Monday in Somalia released four United Nations relief workers - three foreigners and one local staffer - after a brief abduction, the UN said.
Marie Okabe, a spokeswoman at UN headquarters in New York, said that the four were released following a brief detention by the armed kidnappers. No details were provided.
In Nairobi, Dawn Elizabeth Blalock, a spokeswoman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, said that the four workers were seized Monday morning as they travelled to the airport in the town of Waajid, around 340 kilometres north-west of Mogadishu.
Blalock said that while the kidnappers were armed, there was no violence or gunfire during the kidnapping, and that UN and local authorities had worked feverishly to free the abductees.
Armed gangs and insurgents have repeatedly kidnapped and murdered aid workers and journalists in Somalia, which has been embroiled in chaos since military dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was toppled in 1991.

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