Susanne Osthoff

Susanne Kristina Osthoff (born March 7, 1962 in Munich) is a German archaeologist who had worked in Iraq from 1991 until being taken hostage there on November 25, 2005. She was freed by her captors on December 18, 2005.

Biography

Osthoff grew up in Grafing (Bavaria) with two brothers and one sister. Having finished school, she studied Near Eastern archaeology and Semitic languages at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. During the course of her studies, she visited Turkey, Jordan, Iraq, Syria and Yemen to take part in excavations. She was married to a Jordanian, with whom she has a daughter, and has converted to Sunni Islam. Since 1991, she lived more or less continually in Iraq where she primarily worked as an archaeologist but also became involved as an aid worker.

Abduction

In summer 2005, Osthoff, who had previously converted to Sunni Islam, allegedly received several threats of abduction which she relayed to American authorities. Although the threats were judged to be serious and the German embassy asked Osthoff to leave the country, Osthoff decided to stay in the country and continue her work. On November 25, Osthoff and her driver vanished en route from Baghdad to Arbil; shortly after, a DVD containing a video clip was given to the ARD office in Baghdad. In the video, the two captives are shown surrounded by masked, armed men who read a statement demanding that the German government immediately cease all cooperation with the Iraqi government.

While the abduction was initially assumed to be politically motivated and probably instigated by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, there was some speculation as to the real identity of the kidnappers. The very unprofessional quality of the video, along with the fact that the German government has long opposed American involvement in Iraq, led some experts to believe that the kidnappers were common criminals trying to extort money. Others point out that the timing of the abduction very shortly after a change of government in Germany and during a discussion of possible German participation in the training of Iraqi police forces does point towards a politically motivated kidnapping. Al Jazeera carried an article quoting Susanne Osthoff as saying that her kidnappers were not criminals and only demanded German humanitarian aid for Iraq's Sunni Arabs and stated clearly that they did not want a ransom.

Susanne Osthoff and her driver were freed from their captors on December 18, 2005.

Aftermath of the release

In an interview with Arabic news-channel Al-Jazeera on December 23, a mistake in translation by the DPA (German Press Agency) suggested that she wanted to return to Iraq to continue her projects. She was warned by German authorities that this would put her life in danger again and strongly discouraged from returning to Iraq. The German Department of Foreign Affairs even asked the Iraqi government to deny her a new visa.

In her first television interview in Germany, with ZDF, aired on Wednesday, December 28, Susanne Osthoff reacted to questions in a seemingly incoherent manner and appeared in traditional Muslim clothing, including headscarf. This was said to be due to a lack of communication and preparation, but in the German public, many took it as a sign of estrangement. The interview was heavily edited for broadcast.

Speculations

On January 28, 2006, the German magazine Focus reported that part of the ransom money alleged to have been paid by the German government to win the freedom of Susanne Osthoff was found on Osthoff after her release. Without citing its sources, Focus said officials at the German embassy in Baghdad had found several thousand U.S. dollars in the 43-year-old German archaeologist's clothes when she took a shower at the embassy shortly after being freed. The serial numbers on the bills allegedly matched those allegedly used by the government to pay off Osthoff's kidnappers. The German Foreign Ministry declined to comment. The German government is known to have paid ransoms for hostages in the past, but refused to comment on whether it did so for Osthoff.

She gave another interview during the German television chat show 'Beckmann' (ARD) on January 8, 2007, explaining that a certain amount of money had been given to her by the kidnappers as a compensation for the personal goods that had been stolen from her, some of which were quite valuable, e. g. a digital camera. She said she had shown the money to a German embassy official during their first meeting.

Furthermore, suspicions came up that the second victim, Osthoff's Iraqi driver, was involved in the abduction.

Another allegation is that Germany traded the terrorist Mohammed Ali Hamadi, who was convicted of the murder of US Navy sailor Robert Stethem during the hijacking of TWA Flight 847, for Susanne Osthoff.[1]

gollark: Hmm, you may run into gendering issues; let's say 2 a week.
gollark: Of course, 72.1 petadragons would be harder.
gollark: You "only" need 56. One per week is easy.
gollark: That can be more nicely expressed as 72.1 petadragons.
gollark: 72,057,594,037,927,940 CB dragons would be needed for a checkery one.

References

  1. ^ Freed German hostage says Iraq captors not criminals, December 27, 2005
  2. ^ Osthoff-Fahrer Komplize der Geiselnehmer?, Tagesschau December 22, 2005
  3. “Totaler Kontrollverlust”, Der Spiegel, 1/2006, pp 92–95
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