On May 9, 1978, the body of former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro is found, riddled by bullets, in the back of a car in the center of historic Rome. He was kidnapped by Red Brigade terrorists on March 16 after a bloody shoot-out near his suburban home. The Italian government refused to negotiate with the extreme left-wing group, which, after numerous threats, executed Moro on May 9. He was a five-time prime minister of Italy and considered a front-runner for the presidency of Italy in elections due in December.

The Red Brigade, established in 1970 by Italian Renato Curcio, employed bombings, assassinations, kidnappings, and bank robberies as a means of promoting communist revolution in Italy. The Italian Communist Party, which supported democracy and participated in Parliament, condemned the terrorist Red Brigade, and the Red Brigade accused the Communist Party of being a pawn of the bourgeoisie. Renato Curcio and 12 other Red Brigade members were on trial in Turin when Moro was kidnapped, and legal proceedings were only briefly halted after his abduction.


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AFP- Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) has released an audio message from one of two Italians kidnapped in Mauritania in December, US-monitoring agency SITE said on Sunday.


The message is a plea from Italian captive Sergio Cicala and is entitled "Call from the kidnapped Italian to the Berlusconi government," said SITE, which monitors Islamist websites.


It said Cicala's statement, slightly over a minute long, is delivered in Italian and is dated February 24.


Cicala, 65, and his Burkina Faso-born wife Philomene Kabore, 39, were abducted in southeast Mauritania on December 18 by AQIM.


SITE said that on February 5, AQIM issued a message demanding the release of prisoners in exchange for the captives, giving the Italian government 25 days to comply.


In a brief statement from AQIM accompanying Cicala's message, the group called on Italians to pressure their government to meet the demands of the kidnappers.


"We reaffirm our call to the families of the kidnapped and to Italian public opinion: If you desire the safety of the captives, then apply pressure on your offending government and ask it to respond to the legitimate demands of the mujahedeen."

Italy says four Italian journalists have been freed in Libya a day after being kidnapped by men described as loyalists to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.


The Italian Foreign Ministry confirmed the release Thursday, but did not give details.


The group included two newspaper reporters from Milan daily Corriere della Sera, one from Turin's La Stampa and one from the Avvenire Catholic publication.


The journalists' driver was killed during the kidnapping, which occurred Wednesday on a highway between the western town of Zawiya and the capital, Tripoli.


The abduction took place just hours after some 35 foreign journalists held by Gadhafi forces were freed after being detained for about four days inside the Rixos hotel in Tripoli.


The circumstances of their release were not immediately clear. They were, however, freed shortly after representatives of the International Red Cross arrived at the hotel, which has been under the control of pro-Gadhafi forces. 


The journalists said they were met outside the hotel by the representatives, who transported them to another location. 


CNN correspondent Matthew Chance was among the journalists who were detained under what he described as "terrible, horrible" conditions. He told CNN the situation changed when the pro-Gadhafi fighters who controlled the hotel realized the Libyan leader's "regime was over."

Kataleya Mia Chicillo Alvarez was reportedly stuffed into a suitcase and kidnapped from the former Hotel Astor in Florence, Italy, where she and her family lived illegally with about 140 other migrants, on June 10, according to Italian news outlet La Repubblica. (Family handout)

Two years ago, Liam was kidnapped by his Italian-born mother after American courts gave custody of the boy to McCarty. Italian authorities soon deemed her unfit to care for her son. But despite being an American citizen, the Italian courts won't send Liam home.

The Islamic group, calling itself Monotheism and Holy War, had released a video on Thursday showing the kidnapped activist blindfolded and with cuts on his face, held in front of the camera by a fist gripping his hair.

Fr. Pierluigi Maccalli, a missionary of the Society of African Missions (SMA) was kidnapped in Niger, at the border with Burkina Faso on the night of 17 to 18 September 2018 by jihadist militants. He was working in the parish of Bomoanga in the diocese of Niamey.

On the surface level, Kidnapped is a movie about a true case: Edgardo Mortara was kidnapped from his family during the Papal States period in Italian history and brought to Rome to convert. Edgardo does grow up to become a fervent, dedicated Catholic, but the forced splintering of what he was raised to know and what he is being told now unfolds a completely new conflict. Kidnapped fails to directly touch on these themes, but it begins to emerge towards the end, as Edgardo is seen struggling in one pivotal moment when Pius IX is gone, showing that deep within him, he still rejects the erasure of who he once was.

Aldo Moro has always been considered a calm politician. Also for this reason, the words he spoke on March 9, 1977 in Parliament, during a discussion on the Lockheed scandal, caused a certain sensation. And surely many of his colleagues will have remembered them a year later, when, on the morning of March 16 1978, the news agencies began to report that the president of the Christian Democrats had been kidnapped by the Red Brigades, who had killed the five men of his escort and had taken him to the "people's prison" to subject him to a "proletarian trial".

Terrorism is not an exclusively Italian phenomenon: if Spain and Ireland have to deal with separatist armed groups such as ETA and IRA, France and Germany live experiences, albeit at a lower intensity, similar to those in Italy: in France between 1979 and 1987 a group called Action Directe operated, while in Germany, the Rote Armee Fraktion, also known as the Baader-Meinhof Group, active from 1970 to 1998, just a few months before the Moro kidnapping, had kidnapped the head of the German industrialists Hanns-Martin Schleyer, kidnapping which ended dramatically with the killing of the man and the death in prison of the group's founders.

In 2017, a Colombian nun, Sister Gloria Cecilia Narvaez, was kidnapped by al-Qaida-linked militants in Karangasso, about 27 kilometers (17 miles) from where the Italian family has been abducted. The nun was released in 2021 after spending more than four years in captivity.

The two kidnapped Italian aid workers landed in Rome at four on Friday morning. They looked subdued, huddled in their parkas, as the Italian foreign minister escorted them through the darkness between the plane and the arrival hall.

According to local sources, eight armed men on motorbikes entered the parish at about 9pm. They attacked and kidnapped the priest in his bedroom, before heading off with him towards the border of Burkina Faso.

Early reports also suggested the armed men had kidnapped two nuns, members of the Franciscan Missionaries of Marie, but World Watch Monitor has learned that they managed to escape during the attack. Another foreign priest, from Indian origin, who was also in the parish during the attack, is also safe.

Fr. Maccalli is originally from the diocese of Crem in Italy and is a member of the Society of African Missions (SAM). He had served previously in the Ivory Coast for several years. He is the first Catholic priest kidnapped in Niger but the third Westerner detained by armed men in recent years.

Eight assailants on motorcycles kidnapped the 59-year-old priest on Sept. 17, 2018 in a village in the southwestern part of Niger.


The Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Mary witnessed Father Maccalli being taken from his home near the church. Fortunately, the sisters were not harmed. 


There had been no news of the abducted SMA priest's fate or whereabouts until Ar Info reported on April 6 that it had received a video showing him to still be alive.

U.S. Agency for International Development Adviser Kidnapped, July 31, 1970: In Montevideo, Uruguay, the Tupamaros terrorist group kidnapped AID Police adviser Dan Mitrione; his body was found on August 10.

June 16, 1976: Ambassador Francis E. Meloy, Jr. and Economic Counselor Robert O. Waring were kidnapped in Beirut while on their way to meet with President-elect Sarkis. Meloy, Waring, and their Lebanese chauffeur were found dead near a beach several hours alter. No demands were made, and the assassins remain unknown.

Ambassador to Afghanistan Assassinated, February 14, 1979: Four Afghans kidnapped U.S. Ambassador Adolph Dubs in Kabul and demanded the release of various "religious figures." Dubs was killed, along with four alleged terrorists, when Afghan police stormed the hotel room where he was being held.

Kidnapping of Embassy Official, March 16, 1984: The Islamic Jihad kidnapped and later murdered Political Officer William Buckley in Beirut, Lebanon. Other U.S. citizens not connected to the U.S. government were seized over a succeeding two-year period.

Kidnapping of U.S. Officials in Mexico, February 7, 1985: Under the orders of narcotrafficker Rafael Caro Quintero, Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena Salazar and his pilot were kidnapped, tortured and executed.

Kidnapping of William Higgins, February 17, 1988: U.S. Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel W. Higgins was kidnapped and murdered by the Iranian-backed Hizballah group while serving with the United Nations Truce Supervisory Organization (UNTSO) in southern Lebanon. be457b7860

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