Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Militants In Philippines Demand Ransom For Kidnapped Canadians

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Nov, 2015 10:42 AM
    MANILA, Philippines — Suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen have demanded more than $60 million for two Canadians and a Norwegian they are holding in the jungles of the southern Philippines, the largest ransom the Muslim militants have sought for hostages in years.
     
    Army Brig. Gen. Alan Arrojado said Wednesday the Philippine government maintains a no-ransom policy, and there would be no letup in efforts by his troops to secure the hostages' freedom in the safest way possible.
     
    In the video reported by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi websites, the kidnappers and their captives said for the first time that the Abu Sayyaf was behind the Sept. 21 kidnappings at a marina on the southern resort island of Samal.
     
    In the first video of the hostages last month, the kidnappers demanded a stop to military offensives but did not identify themselves.
     
    In the new video, the hostages and one of the mostly masked kidnappers said a ransom of 1 billion pesos ($21 million) must be paid for each of the captives to secure their freedom. The militant said the captives would be killed if the ransoms are not paid but did not give any deadline.
     
    One of the hostages, Canadian John Ridsdel, pleaded for Canada's prime minister and people to heed the ransom demand "as soon as possible or our lives are in great danger."
     
    A militant who did not wear a mask pointed a knife at him and the two other captives as each spoke. A fourth female captive seized from Samal who has been identified by authorities as a Filipino named Marites Flor was not allowed to speak in the video. It wasn't clear whether the militants were demanding a similar ransom for her.
     
    Philippine authorities have identified the two other hostages as Canadian Robert Hall and Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad.
     
    The hostages were seen sitting in a clearing with more than a dozen heavily armed militants standing behind them. Two black flags were displayed in the background.
     
    Samal is in Davao del Norte province in the southern Philippines, the site of a decades-long Muslim rebellion in the largely Roman Catholic nation.
     
     
    The militants are still holding a number of captives in Sulu, including a Dutch birdwatcher and two Malaysians. An elderly South Korean man who was kidnapped 10 months ago and held by the Abu Sayyaf was found dead in Sulu on Saturday. He apparently died from an unspecified illness while in jungle captivity, raising concerns about the health conditions of the remaining captives.
     
    Philippine troops launched new assaults following the South Korean's death, killing at least two Abu Sayyaf militants in Sulu, the military said.
     
    The United States and the Philippines have listed the Abu Sayyaf as a terrorist organization because of kidnappings, beheadings, extortion and bomb attacks. The al-Qaida-linked militants have been weakened but have survived more than a decade of U.S.-backed offensives.
     
    Following the Sept. 21 kidnappings, Philippine authorities vowed to strengthen security in the south. But three weeks later, gunmen abducted a former Italian Catholic missionary from his pizza restaurant in southern Zamboanga Sibugay province.
     
    The abductions highlight the long-running security problems that have hounded the southern Philippines, a region with bountiful resources, but which also suffers from poverty, lawlessness and decades-long Muslim and communist insurgencies.
     
    Video shows Canadians kidnapped in Philippines, says jihadi site monitor group
    Tue, 03 Nov 2015 21:03:09 -0500
     
    TORONTO — Suspected Abu Sayyaf gunmen have demanded more than $60 million for two Canadians and a Norwegian they are holding in the jungles of the southern Philippines in the largest ransom the Muslim militants have sought.
    Army Brig. Gen. Alan Arrojado said Wednesday the Philippine government maintains a no-ransom policy, adding there would be no let-up in efforts by his troops to secure the hostages' freedom in the safest way possible.
     
    In a video that was circulated online by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi websites, the kidnappers and their captives say for the first time that the Abu Sayyaf was behind the Sept. 21 kidnappings.
     
    Abu Sayyaf has been blacklisted by the United States and the Philippines as a terrorist organization.
     
    The hostages — including Canadians John Ridsdel and Robert Hall — were kidnapped from a southern Philippine resort.
     
    It is the second video in the abductions. In a video released last month their captors demanded that government forces stop their artillery attacks.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP Caucus Prepares To Meet In Person For First Time Since Election Defeat

    New Democrat MPs will meet face to face in Ottawa on Wednesday for the first time since the party went from the orange crush to the orange crushed.

    NDP Caucus Prepares To Meet In Person For First Time Since Election Defeat

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September
    The result compared with a revised deficit of $2.7 billion in August that was first reported to be $2.5 billion.

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs
    The preliminary hearing for a woman charged with mischief after providing water to pigs en route to a slaughterhouse has been set for the end of November.

    Preliminary Trial Date Set For Ontario Woman Charged After Giving Water To Pigs

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada
    The Punjabi community in Canada made history on Wednesday when two turbaned Sikhs, among four Indo-Canadians, were sworn in as cabinet ministers, as 42-year-old Justin Trudeau took oath as the country's 23rd prime minister at a grand public ceremony here.

    Two Turbaned Sikhs Among Four Indo-Canadians Sworn In As Cabinet Ministers In Canada

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger
    Bill McNulty says studies conducted in 2005 and 2011 found Richmond Hospital could not withstand even a moderate shaker.

    Richmond Councillor Says Vancouver Coastal Health Ignoring Earthquake Danger

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision
    A 36-year-old Vernon man has been identified as the victim of a single vehicle crash on Highway 95 south of Golden in southeastern B.C.

    Two Walk Away From Vancouver Island Plane Crash; Vernon Man Dies In Unrelated Collision

    PrevNext