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Sandrini freed in Syria

Sandrini freed in Syria

Freed by al Qaeda-linked group from 'criminal gang' near Idlib

Rome, 22 May 2019, 17:37

Redazione ANSA

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- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Alessandro Sandrini, a Brescia native who was taken hostage near the Turkey-Syria border in October 2016, has been released by an al-Qaeda linked anti-government group near Idlib, the militia said Wednesday.
    The self-styled 'government of national salvation', a Syrian branch of the al Qaeda galaxy, published photos of Sandrini, 32, on social network and said that he had been in the hands of a gang of criminals. Turkey, a strong influence in the region, has links to the government of national salvation.
    Sandrini's father said in Brescia: "I can confirm it, my son is free, he's still in Syria but in the hands of our Carabinieri".
    "I'm over the moon," said Gianfranco Sandrini, it's the end of a nightmare, now I'm going to Rome, I hope I can speak to him on the phone tonight".
    Sandrini's kidnapping was only reported in December 2017, a year after he disappeared after travelling to Turkey in October 2016.
    Then, after four phone calls to his mother over the course of several months, a dramatic video was posted showing him in an orange jumpsuit and guarded by two men with AK-47s.
    In the video, Sandrini said they he feared his captors would kill him soon.
    "They have given me the chance to communicate for the last time," Sandrini said in the video released by The SITE intelligence group that monitors online jihadism.
    "I ask Italy to help me, to wrap up this situation quickly.
    "I've been in prison for two years and I can't stand it any more.
    "They have said that they are fed up, that they will kill me if things are not resolved soon.
    "I can't see a future. I don't know what to think... today is July 19, 2018".
    Sandrini left home in Brescia on October 3 2016, when he boarded a flight from the local Orio al Serio airport which took him via Istanbul to Adana, a Turkish town 180 knm from Aleppo.
    "I'm going on holiday," he told his family.
   

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