Held in Syria, four journalists freed

PARIS - Ten months after their capture in Syria, four French journalists crossed the border into neighboring Turkey and reached freedom Saturday, though dozens more remain held in the country’s chaotic civil war.

Edouard Elias, Didier Francois, Nicolas Henin and Pierre Torres - all said to be in good health - were freed during the weekend in unclear circumstances in what has become the world’s deadliest conflict for journalists.

“We are very happy to be free … and it’s very nice to see the sky, to be able to walk, to be able to … speak freely,” said Francois, a noted war correspondent for Europe 1 radio, in footage recorded by the private Turkish news agency DHA. Smiling broadly, he thanked Turkish authorities for their help.

French President Francois Hollande’s office said in a statement that he felt “immense relief” over the release despite the “very trying conditions” of their captivity.

Elias, a freelance photographer, also was working for Europe 1 radio. Henin and Torres are freelance journalists.

A DHA report said soldiers on patrol found the four blindfolded and handcuffed in Turkey’s southeast Sanliurfa province late Friday. Turkish television aired images of the four at a police station and a hospital.

It wasn’t clear whether a ransom had been paid for their release, nor which group in Syria’s chaotic 3-year-old conflict held the men. In his statement, Hollande thanked “all those” who contributed tothe journalists’ release without elaborating. Long-standing French practice is to name a specific country that contributed to hostage releases. France denies it pays ransom to free its hostages.

Several of the journalists’ families told French television stations that they were recently told a “target window” was opening that could mean a return by Easter Sunday.

The four are expected to touch down in France this morning.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said in a statement that freedom for the hostages “was the result of long, difficult, precise, and necessarily discreet work.”

The four were taken separately in June 2013. Two were taken after being interrogated by extremist fighters of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant in the eastern province of Raqqa, said a Syrian activist who said he accompanied the journalists as translator and guide.

Hussam al-Ahmad, 23, said Henin and Torres aroused the fighters’ suspicion after they entered a school and asked to take photographs of the fighters as they played football. Al-Ahmad said the fighters held them for about six hours.

During his interrogation, al-Ahmad said he was asked: “How do you let these infidels enter Syria after they killed our people in Mali?” France’s intervention in January 2013 in Mali scattered Islamic extremists who had taken over the country’s north.

“I said, ‘These brothers are reporters. They have a humanitarian message,’ and then he got angry because I referred to the Frenchmen as my brothers,” al-Ahmad said.

Al-Ahmad said Henin and Torres were seized four days after the interrogation, likely by the Islamic State, an al-Qaida breakaway group.

Al-Ahmad, who fled toTurkey months ago after being threatened by jihadists, said he burst into tears when he heard of the journalists’ release.

“It’s a day of celebration for me,” he said.

Syria is considered the world’s most dangerous assignment for journalists. TheNew York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said that 61 journalists were kidnapped in Syria in 2013, while more than 60 have been killed since the conflict began.

Information for this article was contributed by Albert Aji, Jamey Keaten and Sylvie Corbet of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 10 on 04/20/2014

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