Silco incident explained

Silco Incident
Location:Mediterranean Sea
Date:August 1, 1985
Target:Silco
Type:Kidnapping
Fatalities:0
Injuries:Multiple people abducted
Perps:Abu Nidal Organization (ANO) and Gaddafi loyalists
Motive:Unknown; those kidnapped later traded for release of Said Al Nasr

The Silco Incident involves the kidnapping of the Belgian-French family Houtekins-Kets by the Libyan government from their yacht Silco in the waters of the Mediterranean Sea on August 1, 1985.

Capture and release

The Belgian part of the family was held for almost five years of captivity in Libya, but were freed after the release of Said Al Nasr (who was convicted in the early 1980s for throwing a hand grenade into a group of Jewish children in Antwerp in the 1980 Antwerp summer camp attack) for the family, in Cairo, Egypt, on January 12, 1991. The French part of the family were released somewhat earlier, when the French government negotiated their freedom with the Libyan government.[1]

See also

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: FREED HOSTAGES 'IN BELGIAN HANDS' FAMILY HEADS HOME AFTER PALESTINIAN GUERRILLA LEAVES PRISON NEAR BRUSSELS. Reuters. Orlando Sentinel. 13 January 1991. .