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    Rebels free 29 Chinese in Sudan

    A group of 29 Chinese workers taken by rebels in southern Sudan 11 days ago has been freed in good health and flown to Kenya, officials said on Tuesday, after Beijing protested their capture.

    Insurgents from the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) confirmed the release of the Chinese, who initially spent two or three days walking away from the "front line" in a war zone through sometimes difficult terrain in the Nuba Mountains after their capture, a rebel spokesman told AFP.

    The International Committee of the Red Cross said it arranged the transport of the 29 Chinese to Kenya on an ICRC aircraft.

    "The Sudanese authorities allowed a Red Cross plane to take them from Kauda to Nairobi... this Tuesday morning where they were given to the Chinese embassy there," Sudan's foreign ministry said.

    Rebels say they control Kauda town in South Kordofan state, where they have since June been fighting with government troops.

    China last week lodged a formal protest with Khartoum over the workers' capture and dispatched a six-member team to help gain their freedom.

    Vice Foreign Minister Xie Hangsheng summoned a top-level Sudanese embassy diplomat and urged the African nation to "do everything it can to ensure the safety of the Chinese personnel," the ministry's website said.

    Late Tuesday the ministry confirmed the workers had arrived in the Kenyan capital, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

    "The 29 persons are currently in sound physical conditions and stable mood," the ministry said in a statement quoted by Xinhua.

    It added the workers were handed over to the Chinese embassy after they landed in Nairobi, where they appeared flanked by ambassador to Kenya Liu Guangyuan and Qiu Xuejun, head of the team sent to help secure their release.

    They were due to head home after a short stay in Nairobi, Xinhua said.

    "We were told that one of the workers had a problem with his leg" because of the initial walking after their capture, rebel spokesman Arnu Ngutulu Lodi told AFP. They were later moved by car, he said.

    The captives, who were involved in a road-building project in South Kordofan, had been held since January 28 when the SPLM-N destroyed a Sudanese military convoy between Rashad town and Al-Abbasiya and took over the area, the rebels said.

    ICRC said it was not involved in negotiations to free the Chinese.

    According to Xinhua the workers were taken after a rebel attack on their camp.

    Sudan's foreign ministry spokesman Al-Obeid Meruh said that in addition to the 29 freed Chinese, 17 others had earlier been "released" by the Sudan Armed Forces but one other Chinese died.

    "His body was found yesterday," Meruh said.

    Lodi said he did not know about that.

    Chinese embassy officials in Khartoum could not be reached on Tuesday.

    Lodi said discussions about the Chinese workers began last week when SPLM-N chairman Malik Agar met a Chinese diplomat and asked Beijing to use its influence with Khartoum to help badly needed aid to reach the war zone.

    Agar's talks, in Addis Ababa with the Chinese ambassador to Ethiopia, were followed by more negotiations in Kenya, Lodi said.

    He added the rebels did not set any pre-conditions for the workers' "evacuation".

    "From the beginning we were saying they were not hostages" -- a term used by Sudan's military.

    China is Sudan's major trading partner, the largest buyer of Sudanese oil and a key military supplier to the Khartoum regime.

    Along with the 29 Chinese, the rebels say they captured seven suspected Sudanese national security agents, one of whom later fled.

    "We are now also ready to release the remaining six," Lodi said.

    Sudan has severely restricted the work of foreign relief agencies in South Kordofan and nearby Blue Nile state, where a similar war began in September.

    About 30,000 people fled when the rebels took control of villages in the Al-Abbasiya area on January 28, the United Nations said.

    The UN has backed statements by the United States that there could be a famine unless urgent aid is allowed to enter South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

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    6 comments

    • REAL  •  3 months ago
      ytaz another idiot who try so hard to be his white master...pathetic
    • dante  •  3 months ago
      That shows china has influence in the world, both in economic and politics. Why can't the philippines does what china is doing? I know the answer to that question. Pnoy Aquino is caring more about who is the next dating mate than cares about his people. the filipinos political dynasty runs down from family trees. All filipino politicians are crooked. Political revenege and oral altercation ruins this used to be a great nation in East, the philippines republics. 40 years ago, the philippines was the epicenter in Asia in all economic and social indicators, now it ranks the bottom even among the ASEAN bloc. Why?
    • Man At Work  •  3 months ago
      Like a typical copier, Mindef said that the doctors’ patent for a mobile casualty station is invalid as the invention is "NOT NEW" and involved “NO INVENTIVE STEP”.

      It is STUPID to make these claims because patents ARE NOT ABOUT HOW "NEW" the idea is but who file it first.

      If the world adopt's MINDEF warped logic, then, everyone can disregard the copyrights and patents of inventions blatantly and claim that these technologies are "NOT NEW"!

      Just recall how the NDP (organized by SAF paper generals) got flamed by using Lady's Gaga's song and morphed it into the the idiotic "FUN PAK" cheer you will know how dull-witted is MINDEF.

      Boo Boo Boo.
      • Zorro007 3 months ago
        Lu gila wrong article freind.
    • Ytaz Tan  •  3 months ago
      This reaction of the Chinese government is a Communist propaganda to show the world that they are concerned with their nationals. But, why are they killing those chinese who are against the Chinese Communist leadership? Just asking.
      • Anthony 3 months ago
        Chinese government protect workers they owned. Those chinese they killed are those who goes against them. They are communist. They kill anyone who goes against them. Its really that simple.
      • Zorro007 3 months ago
        And they came in masses to Singapore, that simple!!!!.
    • Ytaz Tan  •  3 months ago
      Hi REAL maybe your parents did not sent you to school. Your words seems to be coming from an Uneducated person. I really felt it. Sorry to tell you that but using and saying a word reflects your true personality and you did it.
    • Ytaz Tan  •  3 months ago
      Is the Communist China really concerned about the lives of their nationals? Maybe yes or maybe no because why did they vetoed the Arab resolutions that justify the killings of more Syrians by the Assad regime? Vested interest is the reason why China vetoed the UN resolution against the Assad regime.
      • Anthony 3 months ago
        the communist China protect their interest. China chinese that work for them is their interest. Syrians in middle east is not their concern.Assad regime is their allies. Simple logic u cannot understand???
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