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Peruvian journalists holding pictures of photographer Jaime Razuri attend a vigil calling for his release in Lima January 2, 2007. Palestinian gunmen kidnapped Razuri,a Peruvian photographer working for Agence France-Presse, in Gaza on Monday. (Xinhua
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Related story: AFP photographer kidnapped in
Gaza
LIMA, Jan. 2 (Xinhua) -- The Peruvian government said
on Tuesday that it would make all possible efforts to free Jaime Razuri, a
Peruvian Agence France-Presse (AFP) photographer kidnapped in Gaza on Jan. 1.
The 50-year-old Razuri was kidnapped by an armed
group that made no demands and left no clue to his whereabouts. Both Palestinian
and Israeli authorities have offered to help find him.
Peruvian Foreign Minister Jose Garcia Belaunde told
reporters in Lima that he was in constant contact with the Palestinian
authorities both in Lima and in the Middle East.
The Foreign Ministry said it had ordered consular
officials in Israel to go to Gaza to help locate Razuri.
Luis Cisneros, president of the Peru Foreign Press
Association, who also works for AFP, said he did not know who the kidnappers
were, but said that Palestine was not as violent as Iraq.
"There is a conflict between Palestinians in Gaza,
but there is no civil war," he said. "We are sure that... this will be resolved
peacefully and that Razuri will be freed. There is no precedent...for any other
outcome."
Cisneros called on the kidnappers to respect their
hostage, and called on the Peruvian government to redouble its efforts to free
Razuri.
He also pointed out that among the 31 foreigners who have been kidnapped in the Middle East in the last 18 months, 20 of them were journalists and all freed, mostly within hours. The worst case, of two Fox News correspondents, took 13 days.