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AP Photographer Freed After Abduction

An Associated Press photographer was released late Tuesday after a harrowing day in the hands of Palestinian gunmen who abducted him at gunpoint in Gaza — the latest in a string of kidnappings of foreigners in the chaotic area.

Emilio Morenatti, 37, was brought before midnight to the office of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas by Fatah officials. It was not immediately clear who kidnapped him, though officials said he was taken by criminal elements. The government and main Palestinian groups denounced the abduction. No demands were made for his release.

Morenatti looked fatigued after his daylong ordeal. He said he was tired but otherwise unharmed.

Abbas is not in Gaza, but his office is a safe Fatah stronghold in the territory, which is in the throes of a sometimes violent power struggle between Abbas' Fatah and the militant Islamic Hamas, which is in charge of the Palestinian government. It was not immediately known how he was handed over to Fatah forces.

Morenatti was kidnapped as he headed out of his Gaza City apartment Tuesday morning for an AP car, where Majed Hamdan, an AP driver and translator, was waiting. Hamdan said four gunmen grabbed his keys and phone and told him to turn away, pressing a gun to his head and threatening to harm him if he moved.

They snatched Morenatti, shoved him into a white Volkswagen Golf car and drove off, Hamdan said.

In other developments:

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  • Israel urged all U.N. member states to denounce and reject Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's renewed call for the destruction of the state of Israel. Israel considers Iran to be the greatest threat to its survival and rejects Tehran's claim that its nuclear program is peaceful. In a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Israel's U.N. Ambassador Dan Gillerman called Ahmadinejad's latest comments a violation of the U.N. charter and an incitement to genocide and racism.
  • The Israeli Health Ministry said Monday that a French flu vaccine did not kill four people who died shortly after being inoculated, and ordered resumption of vaccinations. Israeli Health Minister Yaakov Ben-Yizri demonstrated his faith in the vaccine by getting a flu shot on live television at the end of his news conference. Ben-Yizri, 79, represents the Pensioners' Rights Party.

    Gaza militants have often kidnapped foreign journalists, but all have been released unharmed, reports Berger. But it can take time: Two Fox News journalists kidnapped in August were held for two weeks.

    Militants often use kidnapped foreigners as bargaining chips to get relatives released from Palestinian prisons, secure government jobs or settle personal scores.

    An unknown group calling itself the Holy Jihad Brigades claimed responsibility for the August abduction, and its demand for the release of Muslim prisoners held by the U.S. raised fears that foreign extremists, perhaps al Qaeda, had infiltrated Gaza. But Palestinian security officials later said the name was merely a front for local militants.

    Morenatti, from Jerez, Spain, has been based in the Jerusalem bureau of the AP since April 2005, handling periodic assignments in Gaza and the West Bank. He has been in Gaza since Sunday.

    Morenatti began working for the AP in April 2004, when he spent a year in Afghanistan covering the conflict there. He also covered the recent war in Lebanon and the World Cup soccer tournament in Germany.

    In 1992, Morenatti began work as a photographer with EFE, the Spanish news agency, in Seville, Spain.

    The Tel Aviv-based Foreign Press Association, which represents foreign journalists covering Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, denounced the kidnapping.

    "There can be no justification whatsoever for kidnapping journalists working to cover events inside Gaza, or anywhere else in the Palestinian territories," the FPA said in a statement.

    In the U.S., the media-advocacy groups Reporters Without Borders and the Committee to Protect Journalists also condemned the abduction.

    "We're dismayed that journalists have become pawns of Palestinian groups seeking to exploit them for political purposes," said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. "These blatant attacks on journalists will have a chilling effect on their ability to do their work and will ultimately deprive the world of information about this critically important story."

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