(Reuters) - Kidnappers freed Jordan's ambassador to Libya
and he said on his arrival home on Tuesday that in exchange his
government had sent back to Tripoli a Libyan Islamist militant who had
been serving a life sentence for a bombing plot. Jordan's foreign
minister said the envoy's release was arranged in contacts with Libyan
authorities, not with the kidnappers. But some Jordanian officials
voiced concern at the precedent the handover of the militant could set
for Amman, an important U.S. ally in the fight against al Qaeda. A Libyan foreign ministry spokesman told al-Nabaa television channel that militant Mohammed Dersi was back in Libya. Asked repeatedly whether Dersi was in prison or free, he said only: "Dersi is in Libya and he is fine." Jordanian
Ambassador Fawaz al-Itan was kidnapped last month by Libyan gunmen who
demanded an Islamist militant be freed from a Jordanian jail in exchange
for the diplomat's release. Fawaz
al-Itan told well-wishers including Jordan's prime minister on arrival
at Amman airport that he had been swapped for Dersi, who he said had
been removed from a maximum-security Amman prison and flown to Libya. "The
swap was concluded in a very civilized way. I shook Dersi's hand and
welcomed his release and arrival in Libya," said Itan, adding that he
was treated well by his captors. Dersi and several other Qaeda suspects were jailed for life in 2007 for plotting to blow up Amman airport. Jordanian
Foreign Minister Nasser Joudeh denied any swap had been negotiated with
the kidnappers, saying Itan's release had was part of a legal
arrangement struck with Libyan authorities. "There was no exchange or swap or deal," he told reporters. Judicial
sources said Amman had been quietly working out a face-saving deal that
initially aimed to return Dersi to Libya to serve the remainder of his
sentence at home. But the
kidnappers insisted on Dersi's immediate release, leaving Jordanian
authorities with little alternative, according to the sources. "Yes we
saved the life of Itan but the political cost of succumbing to the
demands of terrorists in future might be higher," said a Jordanian
official who requested anonymity. Analysts
said that agreeing to the kidnappers' demand could set a risky
precedent for the U.S.-aligned Arab kingdom, which has been at the
forefront of covert operations against militant Islamists in the Middle
East. Some Jordanian
officials privately expressed worry that the release of a jailed al
Qaeda militant would raise the danger to Jordanian targets abroad by
emboldening other militants. The
kingdom has some high-profile radical Islamists in its jails, including
cleric Abu Qatada who was deported from Britain, and Mohammad Maqdisi, a
fundamentalist theorist. Kidnappings
have become commonplace in widely lawless Libya, with foreign diplomats
often the targets used to press for the release of Libyan militants
jailed overseas.
Jordanian envoy to Libya freed, Jordan sends back jailed militant
Reuters
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