- Reaction score
- 1
- Points
- 410
http://www.cbc.ca/storyview/MSN/2004/04/16/hostage_iraq040416
Canadian hostage released by Iraqi kidnappers
Last Updated Fri, 16 Apr 2004 19:50:30 EDT
BAGHDAD - Iraqi kidnappers have released Canadian hostage Fadi Fadel, taking him to the offices of radical Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Fadi Ihsan Fadel
Fadel, a 33-year-old Montreal man, was abducted on April 7 while working for the International Rescue Committee, a New York-based non-governmental organization.
Prime Minister Paul Martin confirmed his release on Friday, saying Fadel is "safe and sound," and that he'd spoken with his family in Montreal.
"I just told them how happy I was," said Martin on his way to deliver a speech at the Empire Club.
Martin said he would be dropping in on the Fadel family.
Reports say that al-Sadr appealed Friday for the release of all hostages from countries that are not involved in the occupation of Iraq.
The cleric has been at the centre of rising violence in Najaf in southern Iraq. The U.S. has vowed to capture or kill him.
Other hostages released, more taken
There are also reports that three Czech hostages in Iraq were freed Friday. The three journalists went missing on April 11.
But with the releases, there were reports of new kidnappings.
Iraqis disguised as police officers abducted a businessman from the United Arab Emirates, taking him from his hotel in Basra, said police chief Col. Khalaf al-Maleki.
Earlier reports said the man was from the U.S. The confusion was caused by U.S. stamps on his passport
In Denmark, public television is reporting that a Danish man working on a sewage project in Iraq was kidnapped near the city of Basra. Denmark supported the U.S.-led war and has roughly 400 troops in Iraq.
The Chinese Embassy confirmed a Chinese citizen kidnapped on Wednesday is at the embassy in Baghdad.
Earlier in the week, seven Chinese men were released by their Iraqi captors.
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi says the government has no information about the fate of two Japanese citizens believed abducted. The two journalists disappeared on Wednesday.
Canadian hostage released by Iraqi kidnappers
Last Updated Fri, 16 Apr 2004 19:50:30 EDT
BAGHDAD - Iraqi kidnappers have released Canadian hostage Fadi Fadel, taking him to the offices of radical Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
Fadi Ihsan Fadel
Fadel, a 33-year-old Montreal man, was abducted on April 7 while working for the International Rescue Committee, a New York-based non-governmental organization.
Prime Minister Paul Martin confirmed his release on Friday, saying Fadel is "safe and sound," and that he'd spoken with his family in Montreal.
"I just told them how happy I was," said Martin on his way to deliver a speech at the Empire Club.
Martin said he would be dropping in on the Fadel family.
Reports say that al-Sadr appealed Friday for the release of all hostages from countries that are not involved in the occupation of Iraq.
The cleric has been at the centre of rising violence in Najaf in southern Iraq. The U.S. has vowed to capture or kill him.
Other hostages released, more taken
There are also reports that three Czech hostages in Iraq were freed Friday. The three journalists went missing on April 11.
But with the releases, there were reports of new kidnappings.
Iraqis disguised as police officers abducted a businessman from the United Arab Emirates, taking him from his hotel in Basra, said police chief Col. Khalaf al-Maleki.
Earlier reports said the man was from the U.S. The confusion was caused by U.S. stamps on his passport
In Denmark, public television is reporting that a Danish man working on a sewage project in Iraq was kidnapped near the city of Basra. Denmark supported the U.S.-led war and has roughly 400 troops in Iraq.
The Chinese Embassy confirmed a Chinese citizen kidnapped on Wednesday is at the embassy in Baghdad.
Earlier in the week, seven Chinese men were released by their Iraqi captors.
Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi says the government has no information about the fate of two Japanese citizens believed abducted. The two journalists disappeared on Wednesday.
