New York, September 28, 2004CNN producer Riad Ali was freed
and in the custody of Palestinian police today, a day after being abducted
by gunmen on a main street in Gaza City, CNN reported.
CNN President Jim Walton said the station was "enormously relieved" that
Ali had been released. "His ordeal serves to highlight the dangers faced
by journalists around the world and we at CNN are grateful that this incident
ended the way it did."
CNN said a tape surfaced shortly before Ali's release in which the producer
said he was being held by the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, a militant Palestinian
group with ties to Fatah, the group headed by Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat. The Brigade had earlier denied involvement in the kidnapping,
and had joined other groups in condemning it.
Ali said on the tape that he is a Druze, a minority Arab population in
Israel whose members often serve in the Israeli army. He called for the
Druze not to serve in the Israeli army. No demands were made.
Ali had arrived in Gaza just hours before he was seized at gunpoint from
a car at about 6:30 p.m. local time yesterday. CNN colleagues, including
correspondent Ben Wedeman, were also passengers in the car. A veteran
CNN producer, Ali had handled a number of earlier assignments in Gaza.
Contrary to an initial report in the Israeli daily Haaretz, CNN
said today that the gunmen did not beat the other members of the CNN crew
station or take equipment.

|