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Greek shipping magnate snatched
A PROMINENT Greek ship owner was kidnapped near his home in Athens yesterday by three men armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles, in the third high-profile abduction in Greece since last June, police said.
The founder of Greek ferry operator Superfast Ferries, Pericles Panagopoulos, was abducted as he was being driven to work in a coastal suburb. No-one was injured in the incident, which is being investigated by anti-terrorist police.
"Panagopoulos and his driver were stopped and forced into another car by three gun-wielding assailants," a police official who declined to be named told Reuters.
"The driver was then set free and subsequently informed the police of the event."
Police found a burned van and a car northeast of Athens, believed to belong to the abductors.
Police sources said they thought the kidnapping was the act of criminals seeking a ransom.
In June, the chief executive of aluminium company Alumil and chairman of the Federation of Industries in the northern city of Thessaloniki, George Milonas, was kidnapped before being released two weeks later after a ransom was paid.
Police arrested Greece's most wanted fugitive, Vassilis Palaiokostas, in August for Milonas' kidnapping. He escaped from prison in 2006, where he was serving a sentence for robbery and kidnapping.
Last month, a well-known Athens doctor was also kidnapped but has yet to be found.
Last month Greece was rocked by its worst riots in decades.
The founder of Greek ferry operator Superfast Ferries, Pericles Panagopoulos, was abducted as he was being driven to work in a coastal suburb. No-one was injured in the incident, which is being investigated by anti-terrorist police.
"Panagopoulos and his driver were stopped and forced into another car by three gun-wielding assailants," a police official who declined to be named told Reuters.
"The driver was then set free and subsequently informed the police of the event."
Police found a burned van and a car northeast of Athens, believed to belong to the abductors.
Police sources said they thought the kidnapping was the act of criminals seeking a ransom.
In June, the chief executive of aluminium company Alumil and chairman of the Federation of Industries in the northern city of Thessaloniki, George Milonas, was kidnapped before being released two weeks later after a ransom was paid.
Police arrested Greece's most wanted fugitive, Vassilis Palaiokostas, in August for Milonas' kidnapping. He escaped from prison in 2006, where he was serving a sentence for robbery and kidnapping.
Last month, a well-known Athens doctor was also kidnapped but has yet to be found.
Last month Greece was rocked by its worst riots in decades.
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