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New York, July 27, 2000 --- Andreas Lorenz, the Der Spiegel
reporter who was captured by armed rebels on the southern island of
Jolo on July 2, was released today. He is currently en route to Hamburg
with his wife, Jutta, and Der Spiegel foreign editor Olaf Ihlau.
Lorenz had been held alone and incommunicado for 25 days by a splinter
faction of the militant Islamic group Abu Sayyaf, according to Der
Spiegel. The faction numbers fewer than ten members and is led
by a commander known as "The Rat."
Abu Sayyaf is a loose association of several hundred Muslim guerrillas
fighting for a separate Islamic state in the southern Philippines.
Various factions are believed to be holding more than 30 hostages,
including five journalists. All the journalists were abducted while
reporting on the hostage crisis, which began April 23 with the abduction
of 21 people from a resort on the nearby Malaysian island of Sipadan.
"We are relieved that Andreas Lorenz is free," said Ann Cooper, executive
director of CPJ. "However, we are still extremely worried about the
condition of the remaining five journalists held hostage on Jolo."
On July 9, rebels loyal to Abu Sayyaf commander Galib Andang kidnapped
three French journalists: reporter Maryse Burgot and cameramen Jean-Jacques
Le Garrec and Roland Madura, all from the television station France
2. Andang is the lead negotiator for the Abu Sayyaf and has admitted
to holding both the France 2 team and the remaining hostages from
the Malaysian resort.
On July 24, two local journalists---cameraman Val Cuenca and researcher/writer
Maan Macapagal of the Philippine network ABS-CBN---were abducted from
the village of Upper Kahunayan near Patikul town, an area controlled
by the same Abu Sayyaf faction that kidnapped Lorenz.
This is the second time Lorenz has been detained by rebels on Jolo.
In early June, Abu Sayyaf rebels held 10 foreign journalists, including
Lorenz, for 10 hours until the journalists pooled together their own
funds to pay a US$25,000 ransom.
Der Spiegel has not commented on the circumstances of Lorenz's
release, and did not disclose whether any ransom was paid.
As of today, there were no foreign journalists stationed on Jolo.
Most are reporting from nearby Zamboanga City, using local stringers
based in Jolo town. CPJ has been told that concern for the safety
of both the foreign and local journalists is mounting. Some news agencies
are contemplating a complete pull-out from the area if security conditions
do not improve.
END