Saturday, April 9, 2011

The Libyan government have recognized photographers, which will be released soon

International Writing. .- The Libyan government of Muammar al-Gaddafi has admitted in its power to the Spanish photographer Manuel Varela de Seijas Bravo, known professionally comoManu Brabo, and three other journalists to cover the war displaced in Libya and will soon be released. Spanish photographer and three journalists who had reported missing was in eastern Libya, are really in the hands of officers of Muammar Gaddafi, but they are "safe" way to Tripoli and is expected to be released "soon", sources close to the Libyan regime to CNN.

The three other journalists are Americans James Foley and Clare Morgan Gillis, and also the South African photographer Anton Harmmel. Yesterday, the photographer's father, Manuel Varela, had told Europa Press that he believed his son are in the hands of the forces of Gaddafi. "The last time I spoke to Manuel was on Monday evening through Facebook," he said, adding that "at that time was in Benghazi, where its headquarters and from where it moved to do his job as a photographer" .

The family learned of the disappearance at 13.00 am on Tuesday by a reporter stationed in Cairo, Varela said, indicating that "a head of the NGO Human Rights Watch has confirmed that he was detained by troops Gaddafi" . The father reported that "apparently, Manuel was on Tuesday morning with two fellow Americans and one South African in a vehicle, when Gadhafi troops made them alight, then burned the vehicle and took them retained."

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