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Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Oct 29, 2010 Iraqi police released five jailed women linked to Al-Qaeda in exchange for two kidnapped Kurdish sisters to curb violence in the ethnically divided city of Kirkuk, an anti-terrorism official told AFP on Friday. "We played a role in the release of five Arab women in exchange for the freeing of the two Kurdish girls," said Colonel Aras al-Kaki, chief of the northern Iraqi city's anti-terrorism forces. "The five women had been arrested for terrorism-related crimes, and two are the wives of senior imprisoned members of Ansar al-Sunna," an Islamic group linked to Al-Qaeda, he said, adding the exchange had taken place on Thursday. Security sources said the kidnappers had demanded the release of seven prisoners, including two men, with links to Ansar al-Sunna. Kaki said only the five women were freed. The father of the kidnapped girls in their early 20s said that insurgents wearing military uniforms had stormed his home near Kirkuk early on Thursday. "They entered my home, tied my hands and tried to kidnap three of my daughters," said the father, Walid Jalal al-Kaki, who shares tribal links with the security official. "I managed to free myself and grab one of their guns, killing one and wounding another, and managing to free one of my daughters," said the 55-year-old father, who is close to the Kurdish Democratic Party of regional president Massud Barzani. "I saw four of them, but surely there were more. Two of them managed to flee with my daughters," added the father, a businessman. "I am very happy about this outcome, and to have my daughters here, even though they are in a bad mental state. One of them was hit in the head with a rifle butt," Kaki said. "If we hadn't resolved this crisis in this manner maybe Kirkuk would have witnessed large clashes and violence," the police colonel said. He said Sunni tribal elders had intervened to arrange the exchange. Kirkuk is a tense and fragile mix of Kurds, Sunni Arabs, Turkmen, Shiites and Christians. Women's honour is a sensitive issue that could ignite ethnic strife. "The aim of this act was mainly to create problems between Arabs and Kurds," the colonel said. Kidnappings have become common in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion. But it was the first time that Kirkuk police had agreed to kidnappers' demands to free people with links to insurgents, security sources said.
earlier related report The Airbus A319 is to take off from Paris-Charles de Gaulle at 11:30 pm (2130 GMT) with foreign trade minister Anne-Marie Idrac and 40 French businessmen aboard, landing at Baghdad International five hours later. Commercial flights between the two capitals, previously operated by national carrier Air France, were suspended after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. "This is an historic event because this is the first scheduled direct service by a European airline between a Western capital and Baghdad for 20 years," said France's ambassador to Iraq, Boris Boillon. Aigle Azur, owned by the Franco-Algerian Idjerouidene family, will from early 2011 offer two flights a week from Charles de Gaulle, Europe's second busiest air hub after London Heathrow. Return tickets will cost 1,265 euros (1,750 dollars) in economy class and 2,416 euros in business class. The airline is getting the jump on other European carriers considering flying the route which is potentially lucrative thanks to increasing Western business with the war-ravaged country. "We decided to postpone the opening of the Munich-Baghdad route, initially set for September 30. Demand was too weak. But we are still determined to open a route to Baghdad," said a spokesman for Germany's Lufthansa, which already flies to Arbil in Iraqi Kurdistan. Aigle Azur is negotiating a code-sharing deal that would allow Air France-KLM also to offer flights to the Iraqi capital. France had close trade links with the regime of Iraq's executed leader Saddam Hussein and was vehemently opposed to the March 2003 US-led invasion. In the 1970s, France was one of Iraq's main suppliers of civilian and military equipment, second only to the Soviet Union, with later president Jacques Chirac calling Saddam a personal friend. Today, French business accounts for only one percent of foreign investment in Iraq. France doubled its exports to Iraq in 2009 to 413 million euros (571 million dollars) but that figure remains very low given the estimated 600 billion dollar cost of the country's reconstruction. "It's unthinkable for French businesses not to take part in the reconstruction of Iraq," said Idrac, who is to sign trade agreements notably on agriculture and investment protection while in Baghdad. Pharmaceutical giant Sanofi-Aventis will also sign a deal to supply Iraq with medicine and to help develop its medical sector. Eurocopter, a subsidiary of aerospace giant EADS, is to sign a 20-million-euro deal with the Iraqi agriculture ministry to buy seven Squirrel helicopters to use as crop dusters.
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