Via ChannelTV
Reports that seven French hostages kidnapped in
Cameroon were found alive and safe in a house in northern Nigeria on Thursday
are false, a Nigerian military spokesman said.
“It’s not true,” said Sagir Musa, spokesman for the
military Joint Task Force in Borno state, where the hostages were reported to
have been released.
The fate of seven French tourists seized in Cameroon
by suspected Nigerian Islamist militants was unclear on Thursday after
government officials denied French media reports that they had been freed.
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The hostages, four children and three adults, were
captured this week while on an excursion to the Waza national park near
Cameroon’s border with Nigeria.
Several French media reported earlier on Thursday
that the hostages had been found alive in a house in northern Nigeria and
freed.
“The hostages are safe and sound and are in the
hands of Nigerian authorities,” BFMTV quoted a Cameroon army officer as saying.
“This is a crazy rumour that we cannot confirm. We
do not know where is it coming from,” Cameroon Communications Minister Issa
Tchiroma Bakary said by telephone from the capital Yaounde.
Sagir Musa, a spokesman for Nigeria’s military, told
Reuters the report was “not true.”
Kader Arif, France’s minister for veterans’ affairs,
told parliament on Thursday that the seven hostages had been released but
retracted his statement minutes later, saying he had been quoting media reports
and there was no official confirmation.
It was the first case of foreigners being seized by
suspected Islamist militants in the mainly Muslim north of Cameroon, a former
French colony.
The region is seen as being within the operational
sphere of Nigerian sect Boko Haram and another Islamist militant group, Ansaru.
The threat to French nationals in the region has
grown since France deployed thousands of troops to nearby Mali to root out al
Qaeda-linked Islamists who took control of the country’s north last year.
The kidnapping in Cameroon brought to 15 the number
of French citizens being held in West Africa.
French diplomatic sources said the government would
not confirm the hostages had been released until it had physical proof, or
until they were in French hands.
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