Daniele Mastrogiacomo
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Daniele Mastrogiacomo (born on 30 September 1954) is an Italian-Swiss journalist and a war correspondent for la Repubblica newspaper.
He was born in Karachi, Pakistan. An expert in foreign politics, he began working for la Repubblica in 1980 and has been a special international reporter since 1992. Mastrogiacomo reported on events such as police operation Mani Pulite, the Marta Russo murder and the Priebke affair. He has worked in Afghanistan, Iran, Palestina, Iraq and Somalia. In 2006 he reported on the Lebanon war.
[edit] Kidnapping
On March 5, 2007, Mastrogiacomo along with Afghan journalist Ajmal Naqshbandi and an Afghan driver Sayed Agha, was on his way to Taliban controlled southern Afghanistan. They were kidnapped by Mullah Dadullah's men.
Initially, the Taliban believed Mastrogiacomo was a United Kingdom officer. When it was discovered that he was an Italian reporter, they demanded that Italy withdraw their troops. After Italy had refused, war surgeon and Emergency founder Gino Strada contacted the Taliban in an attempt to free Mastrogiacomo. The Taliban made a video of the Italian journalist Daniele Mastrogiacomo, his driver Sayed Agha and his colleague Ajmal Naqshbandi, kneeling blindfolded before gun-wielding militants. It then showed Agha being beheaded after which a shaken Mastrogiacomo made an impassioned appeal to Italian authorities to "do something," while underlining that the situation was "very difficult".
The Taliban eventually freed Mastrogiacomo in exchange for the release of five Taliban prisoners (including Dadullah's brother Mullah Shah Mansoor and other Taliban commanders), and he returned to his country on March 20. His first words were, "I hope the Taliban will never return to the Afghanistan government."
Ajmal Naqshbandi was not freed, however, and on April 8, 2007 he was executed.[1]
On, May 12, 2007 Mullah Dadullah as well as three of the Taliban commanders who were released in exchange for Mastrogiacomo were killed by a US-led action. They included Dadullah's brother Mullah Shah Mansoor, Mullah Hamdullah and Mullah Ghafar.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ "Taleban kill Afghanistan reporter", BBC, 2007-4-8.
- ^ "Raid kills Taliban exchanged for Italian", Reuters, 2007-5-16.