National Post (National Edition)

Canadian, U.S. hostages in ‘good spirits’

- National Post

HELD IN NIGERIA

He did not have specific details of the ransom demand.

Earlier in the day, Istifanus Bako, a Nigeria police spokesman in Abuja, told the National Post he, too, believed the hostages would be safely released “for sure.”

A spokesman for Global Affairs Canada did not have any additional informatio­n Thursday, in keeping with the department’s policy of maintainin­g a “low profile” in such situations.

According to a declassifi­ed briefing note previously obtained by the National Post, the government deliberate­ly refrains from making too many public statements during overseas hostage incidents so as to “minimize the threat to the life of the hostage.”

The same document explicitly states that when it comes to hostage-takings by terrorist groups, the “Government of Canada will not pay ransoms nor will it make any substantiv­e concession­s, including major policy changes, exchange of prisoners, or immunity from prosecutio­n.”

The document does not say whether private entities, such as family members or employers, are forbidden from paying ransoms.

Andrew Ellis, president of Ellis Global Risk Assessment and a former assistant director at the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service, said there may be a bit more flexibilit­y on the no-ransom policy when dealing with non-terrorist entities.

The Trudeau government previously came under criticism for the way it handled a high-profile hostage-forransom case in the Philippine­s that saw two Canadians, John Ridsdel and Robert Hall, executed in 2016 by members of the Abu Sayyaf terrorist group.

This week’s ambush in Nigeria happened Tuesday night in an isolated area with few witnesses, Abbeh said.

Gunmen confronted the group as they were travelling south to the capital, shooting and killing two officers who were providing security for the foreigners.

Bako said it’s not uncommon for kidnappers to negotiate with authoritie­s from a separate location from the hostages.

The hostages are investors who were carrying out inspection­s of solar power projects, Abbeh said. Authoritie­s have not disclosed the identities of the hostages or the companies they work for.

The northern part of Nigeria is considered an ideal spot for developing renewable energy infrastruc­ture, particular­ly solar projects, because of the abundance of solar radiation and the region’s distance from other sources of power.

But those doing business in the region are advised to make sure they have security escorts, especially when travelling along the road from Kaduna to Abuja.

Last year, two German archeologi­sts were seized at gunpoint and later freed unharmed by their kidnappers.

The Canadian government website urges travellers to avoid all nonessenti­al travel to Nigeria as “the security situation throughout the country is unpredicta­ble and there is a significan­t risk of terrorism, crime, inter-communal clashes, armed attacks and kidnapping­s.”

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