Italian hostage in Philippines freed after six months
An Italian Red Cross official held hostage by Muslim rebels for nearly six months in southern Philippines was freed yesterday, saying the thought of seeing his family again kept him alive throughout his captivity. Eugenio Vagni, 61, was abandoned by...
An Italian Red Cross official held hostage by Muslim rebels for nearly six months in southern Philippines was freed yesterday, saying the thought of seeing his family again kept him alive throughout his captivity.
Eugenio Vagni, 61, was abandoned by his captors at a remote village in Maimbung town on Jolo island early yesterday and was fetched by soldiers and Nur-Ana Sahidulla, vice governor of Sulu province in the south of the mainly Catholic Philippines, the military said.
He was taken to an army base for a medical check up and later flown to an air base in the southern port city of Zamboanga, where colleagues from the Red Cross were waiting for him.
"I only found some little paper, that to feel alive I was writing some thoughts to my wife," said Mr Vagni, adding he had been threatened with beheading. He said he had been fed dried fish and rice, and had lost 20 kilos in weight.
Before he left Zamboanga for Manila, Mr Vagni thanked those who prayed and worked for his release, saying: "I was thinking that it will never happen".
Wearing a dark shirt with a Philippine Marines logo and blue jogging pants, Mr Vagni, visibly weak, smiled and waved to the cameras as he was reunited with his Thai wife and daughter at an air base in Manila.
Mr Vagni said he was not aware that his co-worker, Swiss national Andreas Notter, had already been freed, adding the rebels separated them because he couldn't keep pace with his captors in the jungle due to a hernia.
Mr Notter was released in April, several days after another Red Cross worker, Filipina Mary Jean Lacaba, was set free by the rebels. The three were taken hostage on January 15 after they inspected a sanitation project at a prison on Jolo.
Officials said no ransom had been paid for Mr Vagni. But local news websites said he was released after the military agreed to free two wives of a senior Abu Sayyaf leader, part of the group that held Mr Vagni in the rugged interior of Jolo since January.
The women were arrested at a military checkpoint on Tuesday, the news reports said. But the military denied it had agreed to an exchange of prisoners, saying pressure exerted by security forces contributed to the release.
Military spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Edgard Arevalo said in a statement the offensive against the Abu Sayyaf would continue.
A spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said they were "very happy and relieved to hear" of Mr Vagni's release.