Hostages leave Spanish consulate in Berne - police (Agencies) Updated: 2005-02-07 22:20
Three armed men, suspected robbers, were thought to be trapped in the Spanish
consulate in the Swiss capital Berne Monday but three of their hostages had left
the building, police said.
 An armed police
officer heads towards the Spanish consulate in Berne February 7, 2005.
[Reuters] | Five hours after the drama began at 8
a.m. (0700 GMT), it was unclear whether the hostage takers or any more hostages
were still in the building but, police said, the three known hostages had either
escaped or been freed.
The Spanish Foreign Ministry said it did not suspect Islamic terrorism was
the motive and the intruders appeared headed for the embassy safe.
"We assume (that they are still in the building). We are acting as though
they are," Berne cantonal police spokesman Juerg Mosimann told reporters at the
scene.
Police said the three men were believed to be armed with a knife and a
firearm.
A Reuters correspondent at the scene said police had used a megaphone to call
on the hostage-takers to leave the building with their hands in the air, without
any apparent response. One hostage managed to escape, while police freed two
more employees, police said.
"The two Spanish citizens who were taken hostage ... have left the premises
safe and sound," Angel Vazquez, a spokesman for Spain's Foreign Ministry, told
Spanish state radio.
HEADED FOR THE SAFE
An armored personnel carrier was in front of the building in Berne's upscale
embassy district near the historic center.
Swiss radio RSR said one or more intruders had forced their way into the
consulate just as an employee was arriving for work. Another employee was
already inside the building.
When a third employee turned up, he or she was pushed back out of the door.
At that moment, a police car was passing and raised the alarm, RSR said.
Swiss television SF-DRS said the intruders spoke French.
"We suspect that the motives of the assailants could be economic as these
three individuals headed for the strong box (safe) from the outset," Vazquez
told Reuters in Madrid.
There was no indication so far that the incident was related to Islamic
militants. Swiss authorities have agreed to extradite Mohammed Achraf as part of
a Spanish judge's investigation into the "Martyrs for Morocco" group, which, he
says, flourished among Muslim prisoners in Spain's jails.
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