
ISIS frees Kurdish journalist in exchange
Freelance reporters Massoud Aqeel and Farhad Hamo were on assignment for Rudaw in northeastern Syria when they were seized by ISIS
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group has released in a prisoner exchange one of two Kurdish journalists captured late last year, an official with Iraq’s Kurdish television Rudaw said Wednesday.
Freelance reporters Massoud Aqeel and Farhad Hamo were on assignment for Rudaw in northeastern Syria when they were seized on December 15.
Aqeel “was freed yesterday as part of a prisoner exchange between Kurdish forces and Daesh,” the Rudaw official said, using another acronym for ISIS.
“He spent the night in Tell Kocher under the protection of Kurdish fighters and he is now back in Qamishli,” a large town in Syria’s Kurdish area, near the border with Turkey.
“Farhad Hamo’s fate remains unknown,” said the official, who refused to provide further details on the exchange.
Reporters Without Borders ranked Syria 177th out of 180 in its 2015 press freedom index.
According to the Paris-based watchdog, at least 30 journalists and online information providers are detained by the regime and at least 28 others are either missing or held hostage by armed groups, including ISIS.
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