British boy released in Pakistan

A British boy who was kidnapped in Pakistan earlier this month has been released.

A British boy who was kidnapped in Pakistan earlier this month has been released.

"We are very happy. Thank God he is safe and sound." said Raja Basharat, the grand-uncle of five-year-old Sahil Saeed, who is from Oldham.

Punjab law minister Rana Sanaullah, who is also responsible for security in the province where the boy was abducted, said an "international gang of kidnappers" was responsible. "We are trying to bust this gang with the help of other countries," he said.

However, Interior Minister Rehman Malik said he suspected some relatives were involved in the abduction. He said today the boy would be handed over to family members or responsible people in Pakistan because his father was not in the country.

Police in Jhelum, the town where the boy was kidnapped, had said the gunmen who abducted him after holding relatives at gunpoint for several hours took away 150,000 rupees (€1,300) and some gold and later demanded a 10 million rupee (€86,000) ransom.

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The circumstances around the boy's release were not immediately clear.

"It is fantastic news which brings an end to the traumatic ordeal faced by Sahil and his family," the British High Commissioner in Islamabad, Adam Thomson, said in a statement.

"I would like to praise the high-level of cooperation between UK and Pakistani authorities and in particular, I would like to thank the Jhelum police for their role in bringing about the safe return of Sahil."

Kidnapping is a major problem in Pakistan and many of the crimes go unreported. Police have said Taliban militants use ransoms from kidnappings to fund their insurgency against the US-backed government.

There were no signs that the latest kidnapping was linked to militants.