LONDON// Eight members of a British special forces team sent to rebel-held Benghazi were freed last night after being locked up by opponents of the Qaddafi regime.
The members of the elite SAS Regiment, who had been flown into Benghazi as protection for a UK diplomat sent in to open a dialogue with the rebels, left the port in eastern Libya last night aboard the British warship HMS Cumberland.
The UK defence secretary, Liam Fox, had confirmed earlier in the day that a British diplomatic team had been flown in to Libya to talk to rebel forces but would not confirm that the accompanying soldiers had been detained.
Diplomatic sources in London said that the soldiers, who were armed but not in military uniform, were detained by rebels annoyed by a foreign military presence on their soil.
The soldiers, who were believed to have been among a group who landed by helicopter just outside Benghazi on Saturday morning, were never thought to be in danger as negotiations got under way yesterday. HMS Cumberland arrived in the port last week to pick up UK nationals and deliver relief and medical supplies.
Dr Fox confirmed to the BBC yesterday that a "small diplomatic team" had been sent to Benghazi. "We are in touch with them but it would be inappropriate for me to comment further on that for reasons I am sure you will understand," he added.
John Leyne, a BBC correspondent in Benghazi, said in a dispatch that he was surprised that Britain had taken the "James Bond route" to fly the diplomats guarded by special forces to the city.
"There was a British warship here in town just a few days ago," he said. "If anyone wanted to make contact with the authorities here, they could have just walked down the gangplank and hailed a taxi."
Last week, three Dutch special forces soldiers were captured by Col Qaddafi's forces in western Libya while assisting in the evacuation of Dutch nationals.
There has been no word of them since Thursday when the Dutch government said that "intensive diplomatic talks" were under way.
dsapstead@thenational.ae
Eight British SAS men freed in Libya
The soldiers, who were armed but not in military uniform, and were guarding a team of British diplomats who had flown to Libya to talk to rebel forces, were reportedly detained by rebels annoyed by a foreign military presence on their soil.
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