ASWAN, Egypt, Sept. 24, 2008

19 Hostages Holed Up In Egyptian Desert

Sudanese Troops Keeping Watch Over Kidnappers Who Seized 11 Europeans, 8 Tour Guides

  • Undated file picture showing Egypt's south western desert, where a group of 11 European tourists and eight Egyptians were kidnapped during an adventure safari in the Sahara desert and were taken across the border into neighboring Sudan, Monday. Sept. 22, 2008.

    Undated file picture showing Egypt's south western desert, where a group of 11 European tourists and eight Egyptians were kidnapped during an adventure safari in the Sahara desert and were taken across the border into neighboring Sudan, Monday. Sept. 22, 2008.  (AP Photo/Saedi Press, File)

  • Fast Facts Egypt

    Learn about the people, economy and history.

  • Fast Facts Sudan

    Learn about the people, economy and history.

(AP)  Sudanese troops are keeping watch over a band of kidnappers holed up in the desert after snatching a 19-member tour group in Egypt, but are not closing in on them, fearing any move could endanger the hostages, Sudan's Foreign Ministry said Wednesday.

Germany, five of whose citizens are among the captives, has been negotiating with the kidnappers since the group was snatched on Friday while on a Sahara desert safari to a remote plateau in the southwestern corner of Egypt, according to Egyptian officials.

Negotiations have been taking place through two phone calls a day between the tour company's Egyptian owner, who was among those kidnapped, and his German wife, who lives in Egypt, an Egyptian security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details of the talks.

Germany has been silent on any negotiations, refusing to even confirm that it is conducting them.

The kidnappers' identity remains a mystery. They are believed to be desert tribesmen, and Egypt's state news agency MENA has said they are demanding up to $15 million in ransom.

Sudan said Tuesday it believes they are Egyptians, but MENA on Wednesday quoted an unidentified Egyptian security official denying they were Egyptians. In one of his initial calls to his wife, the tour operator reportedly described the kidnappers as "African" in appearance.

The five Germans, five Italians, a Romanian, and eight Egyptian guides and drivers were abducted while visiting the Gilf al-Kebir, an isolated plateau some 550 miles southwest of Cairo in Egypt's Western Desert. Only a few hundred adventure tourists a year make the grueling desert journey to the Gilf, drawn by its dramatic desert scenery and rich troves of prehistoric cave art.

Sudan says the kidnappers and their captives have been located in the desert of northwestern Sudan, about 15 miles from the Egyptian border.

"We are now in remote surveillance (of the kidnappers) but we are not planning to storm the place or threaten the lives of hostages," Sudanese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ali Youssef told The Associated Press. "No military action is considered at all."

It was the first such abduction of tourists in Egypt, a country that was plagued in the 1990s by Islamic militant bombings and shooting against tourists. The militant violence was largely suppressed a decade ago.

Egyptian officials have underlined that the kidnapping was not connected to terrorism, but was by "criminals" seeking ransom.

The isolated region around the Gilf is a crossroads for nomadic tribes in Libya, Sudan and even Chad, and lies on routes used by drug smugglers. It has seen a few previous robberies of tourists, according to tour operators.




© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by god-is-true September 25, 2008 12:43 PM EDT
I think we should send Nancy Pelosi, she could sit down and have a nice talk over tea and iron everything out.
Reply to this comment
by peeinpants September 25, 2008 11:51 AM EDT
Yeah, right. Send in the U.N. That would only amount to sending a bunch of well paid guys on a holiday to Egypt and Sudan with first class perks to boot. Ghambari got 3 paid for trips to Burma. For what? He didn''t accomplish a damned thing. Moon (U.N. head honcho) also had himself a trip or two to Burma. These guys are inept. Ask any proper citizen of Burma what good those visits did them. No, give up on the thought of the U.N. doing one bit of good. They are a farce! The U.N. is fearful of taking a strong stance anywhere.
Reply to this comment
by runningralph September 25, 2008 10:13 AM EDT
Sounds like a job for George Clooney. He should try to do something to justify the award the UN gave him.
Reply to this comment

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