ROME,
September 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Scores of
Italians demonstrated Wednesday morning, September 8, in front of the
office of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, demanding him to seriously
react over the kidnapping of two Italian aid workers in Iraq.
Blaming
him for not doing enough to save the life of an Italian journalist
held hostage in Iraq last month, relatives and friends of Simona Pari
and Simona Torretta, who were abducted Tuesday, September 7, urged
Berlusconi to take immediate action to guarantee the safety of the
pair, Al-Jazeera satellite channel reported.
“We
state a sit-in here in front of the government’s headquarters in
solidarity with Pari and Torretta and to send a clear message to the
prime minister: Take an action,” one anguished relative told the
all-news Arabic television.
Opposition
members also called on Rome to do all it could to secure the aid
workers' safe release.
“The
government is duty-bound to do all within its power to save their
lives,” said Pietro Folena of the Democrats of the Left.
Armed
men kidnapped the two women charity workers from their Baghdad offices
at gunpoint along with two fellow Iraqi aid workers, witnesses in the
Iraqi capital told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
“At
5:00 pm (1300 GMT), two men entered the office... and led the staff
into the corridor,” said Jean-Dominique Bunel, a coordinator with a
French non-governmental organization.
The
two women and one of the two Iraqis were working for the Italian
charity Un Ponte Per Baghdad (Bridge to Baghdad) while the second
Iraqi worked for a non-governmental organisation called Intersource.
Witnesses
said the kidnappers drove up in three cars to the offices of the two
organizations in the late afternoon and seized the four hostages.
The
abduction marked a new worrying development in the ever-deepening
hostage crisis that has plagued Iraq since the spring.
Unlike
the dozens of foreigners captured since then, the four kidnapped
Tuesday were not snatched on one of Iraq's dangerous roads but inside
their office in a quiet residential area of Baghdad.
Anti-Western
Policies
Ironically
the aid organization for which Pari and Torretta worked is a
long-standing opponent of Western policy towards Iraq.
The
group campaigned vigorously against the crippling UN sanctions
enforced against Iraq from its 1990 invasion of Kuwait right up to
last year.
Under
Saddam Hussein's regime, it ran health care, education and water
treatment projects in a bid to alleviate their impact on the Iraqi
people.
The
organization's operations are not limited to Iraq -- it has also
worked in Kosovo and the Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon, and
campaigned against the impact of globalization.
The
attack was condemned by four senior Iraqi religious leaders, including
two Imams.
The
plea was issued in Milan by Mohammed Bachar Sharif Al-Faidhi from the
Committee of Muslim Ulema, Iraqi's most senior organisation of Sunni
Muslim scholars; brothers Mohammad and Jaouad Mahdi Al-Khalisi from
the Iraqi reform council; and Shlemon Wardnuni, the Catholic bishop of
Baghdad.
“In
the name of God the merciful, in the name of all the religious
scholars meeting here in Milan ... we urge the kidnappers to release
immediately and without pre-conditions the two Italians -- who were
working in the interest of Iraq and the Iraqi people -- and their
Iraqi colleagues,” the four religious leaders said.
The
union of Islamic organizations and communities in Italy has also
appealed for the release of the four aid workers.
Crisis
Meeting
Berlusconi
rushed back from northern Italy to Rome for an emergency cabinet
meeting following the kidnapping.
“The
government is convinced of the need for a united national response in
the face of terrorism and has scheduled a meeting for tomorrow with
representatives of the opposition,” Berlusconi's office said in a
statement after the crisis meeting.
Foreign
Minister Franco Frattini had already contacted his counterparts in
Iraq, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, who had assured him of
their “full personal commitment” to ensure the Italians' release,
his ministry said.
The
interior ministry warned that the kidnapping is a “dangerous
escalation” in Iraq's hostage crisis.
The
kidnappings “are a dangerous escalation in the cycle of
hostage-taking targeting foreigners in Iraq and the fact they happened
in Baghdad means they can happen anywhere in the country”, ministry
spokesman Sabah Kazem told AFP.
Italy
was a key supporter of last year's US-led invasion of Iraq and is the
third largest contributor to occupation forces with around 3,000
troops stationed largely in the south.
Berlusconi's
hawkish line has come in for mounting criticism at home.