Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Taliban Says It Released Canadian Hostage On Humanitarian Grounds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2016 11:33 AM
  • Taliban Says It Released Canadian Hostage On Humanitarian Grounds
A Canadian man held hostage by the Taliban for five years was freed for humanitarian reasons, his captors claimed Tuesday, as dramatic details of his release emerged.
 
Colin Rutherford was on a private vacation in Afghanistan when he was seized by the Taliban in November 2010.
 
His release was abruptly announced on Monday in a brief statement from Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion, who would only say that efforts to free Rutherford had involved the government of Qatar.
 
The Taliban confirmed Qatar's involvement in a statement released Tuesday, but also elaborated on why Rutherford had been let go.
 
It said Rutherford was freed "on grounds of humanitarian sympathy and sublime Islamic ethics."
 
The Taliban statement also said Rutherford had been detained in Afghanistan's northeastern Ghazni province.
 
The Canadian Embassy in Kabul has not yet revealed Rutherford's current whereabouts and it wasn't immediately clear if he had been flown out of Afghanistan.
 
But an Afghani official divulged a few details of Rutherford's release a day after it took place.
 
Police chief Gen. Aminullah Amarkhil said it involved a helicopter landing to scoop Rutherford to freedom as fighter jets flew overhead.
 
Amarkhil added that Rutherford had been released at 11 a.m. on Monday in Ghazni province's remote Giro district.
 
The involvement of Qatar in Rutherford's release is not entirely surprising. The Persian Gulf country has at times quietly played mediator between western governments and the Taliban — even helping to facilitate peace negotiations between governments in Kabul and the hardline insurgency.
 
The Taliban have openly maintained a political office in the capital of Doha since 2013.
 
The last indication Rutherford's family had that he was alive came in a 2011 video released by insurgents where he answered questions; an accompanying email accused Rutherford, then 26, of being a spy.
 
In the video, Rutherford, who is from Toronto, insisted he was not a spy and had travelled to Afghanistan to study historical sites, old buildings and shrines.
 
Rutherford's brother has called the Canadian's release "incredible news."
 
"It absolutely is an enormous relief," Brian Rutherford said in a message to The Canadian Press. "My deepest gratitude to all those whose efforts have aided in Colin's safe release."
 
Rutherford was working as an auditor with the Canadian Circulations Audit Board in Toronto when he went on vacation to Afghanistan.

MORE International ARTICLES

Over to you, Obama: Nebraska court clears path for presidential decision on Keystone

Over to you, Obama: Nebraska court clears path for presidential decision on Keystone
WASHINGTON — The Keystone XL pipeline decision now rests in President Barack Obama's hands, with a Nebraska court clearing an obstacle that has delayed a decision on the Canadian project.

Over to you, Obama: Nebraska court clears path for presidential decision on Keystone

Report into fatal plane crash in NWT shows plane was damaged, pilot felt ill

Report into fatal plane crash in NWT shows plane was damaged, pilot felt ill
IVANHOE LAKE, N.W.T. — Investigators say a pilot killed in a crash in the Northwest Territories made poor choices, including taking off in a damaged plane.

Report into fatal plane crash in NWT shows plane was damaged, pilot felt ill

Paris Carnage: Fugitive Charlie Hebdo Killers 'Abandon Car and Hide out in Woods'

Paris Carnage: Fugitive Charlie Hebdo Killers 'Abandon Car and Hide out in Woods'
Two of the suspects involved in the attack on a magazine office in Paris were reportedly spotted in northern France Thursday while a third surrendered to police as France went into mourning a day after the tragedy.

Paris Carnage: Fugitive Charlie Hebdo Killers 'Abandon Car and Hide out in Woods'

Magnitude 4.6 Earthquake Strikes Off West Coast Of Vancouver Island

Magnitude 4.6 Earthquake Strikes Off West Coast Of Vancouver Island
TOFINO, B.C. — Houses shook, dishes broke and some residents of Tofino, B.C., thought an explosion or car accident occurred, but there was no tsunami or major damage reported by a 4.6 magnitude earthquake.

Magnitude 4.6 Earthquake Strikes Off West Coast Of Vancouver Island

Charlie Hebdo Attack: One Suspect Surrenders In Paris

Charlie Hebdo Attack: One Suspect Surrenders In Paris
The three suspects were later identified and named in a police document circulated to regional forces as Hamyd Mourad, 18, and brothers Said Kouachi, 32 and Cherif Kouachi, 34.

Charlie Hebdo Attack: One Suspect Surrenders In Paris

Mahatma Gandhi An Integral Part Of South Africa: SA Minister

Mahatma Gandhi An Integral Part Of South Africa: SA Minister
Mahatma Gandhi was an integral part of South Africa and the country shares an inseparable bond with India, South African Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane Wednesday told the Indian diaspora youth at the PBD here.

Mahatma Gandhi An Integral Part Of South Africa: SA Minister