TEN Chinese and 17 local hostages have been released in Cameroon, where they were kidnapped earlier this year in raids blamed on the Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram, Cameroon’s president said Saturday.
“The 27 hostages abducted May 16 in Waza and July 27 in Kolofata were released to the Cameroonian authorities this night,” President Paul Biya said in a statement on national radio.
The 10 Chinese citizens and other hostages, who also included the wife of Cameroon’s deputy prime minister, were all “safe and sound,” he said.
The Chinese were brought to Yaounde airport by military plane. As was the case in past kidnappings of foreigners blamed on Boko Haram, no details were given on how the hostages were freed.
Cameroon’s government remained vague about whether a ransom was paid.
The Chinese were seized in May from a construction camp in Waza near the border with Nigeria in an attack that left one Cameroonian soldier dead.
The July kidnappings were carried out during two simultaneous assaults, also blamed on Boko Haram, in which at least 15 people died.(SD-Agencies)
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