Italy was in shock Thursday
after the dramatic rescue of 51 children taken hostage by their school
bus driver who torched the vehicle in protest at Mediterranean migrant
deaths.
The Italian driver of Senegalese origin on
Wednesday hijacked the bus as it was taking the 12-13 year-olds from a
gym to school in Crema, east of Milan.
Armed with two petrol canisters and a
cigarette lighter, Ousseynou Sy threatened the youngsters, took their
telephones and told the adults to tie them up with electric cable.
The 40-minute ordeal, during which
the bus also slammed into a car, was brought to an end when police
managed to smash windows open and get those onboard out just as the
driver set fire to the vehicle.
A dozen children and two adults were taken to hospital for smoke and fume inhalation,
"It's crazy, absurd, it's unacceptable. Someone
has to pay, and dearly," said Filippo Razzini, the father of a pupil at
the school in the small town of Crema who was not on the bus.
"It's good to go back to school today because
unfortunately these things are today a reality. But if it were up to me
I'd be out there waiting for this guy somewhere," he told AFP.
The driver's lawyer said his client had wanted to "draw attention to the consequences of (Italy's) migration policies".
Italy has clamped down on immigration
under far-right Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, demanding it close
its ports to charity vessels rescuing migrants who are trying to cross
the Mediterranean.
"This villain has to pay for everything," said
Salvini, whose League party is riding high in the polls in part because
of its tough anti-migrant stance.
He said Sy's citizenship could be revoked if convicted of terror under a tough security decree introduced last year.
'Lone wolf'
The Milan police anti-terrorism unit has been
charged with investigating the hostage-taking, during which Sy
reportedly told students: "No one is getting out of here alive."
Police were alerted to the situation after one of the students held on the bus called them from his mobile phone.
The incident has shaken Crema's community.
"My daughter was in shock yesterday, she said 'Mummy, I could have been there too'," parent Luisa Ginelli told AFP Thursday.
The driver had no links with Islamic terrorism
and "acted as a lone wolf", Alberto Nobili, head of counter-terrorism
at the Milan public prosecutor's office, told a press conference.
Nobili said Thursday that Sy had planned the hijack over several days and "wanted the whole world talking about his story".
He
posted a video on YouTube to explain his actions and call on relatives
and friends in Crema and Senegal to take action, saying: "Africa --
arise."
Sy got his Italian nationality and job in 2004
and managed to keep subsequent convictions for drink driving and sexual
assault of a minor secret from his employer, the Corriere della Sera
newspaper reported.
A neighbour told La Stampa newspaper that he was known as "Paolo".
"That's what we called him because his name
was too complicated. I saw him go out every morning, he drove a bus. A
quiet man but solitary," she said.
Colleagues told Italian media that Sy's
separation from his Italian wife, with whom he has two teenage children,
was "when his problems started.
1/4Driver Ousseynou Sy said
under questioning that he wanted "to draw attention to the consequences
of migration policies", according to his lawyer2/4Student Ramy Shehata (2ndL), 14, managed to call the police from his mobile phone while he was being held hostage on the bus3/4Officers have been posted outside the "Giovanni Vailati" secondary school in Crema following Wednesday's incident4/4The driver had no links with Islamic terrorism and "acted as a lone wolf", Italian officials said
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