Sherbrooke Record

Quebec woman

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A source told The Canadian Press they arrived in Bamako, the capital of Mali, just before noon local time on Saturday after spending the night at a UN camp in Kidal, in the northeaste­rn part of the country.

The source said the pair apparently fled their captors, flagged down a private vehicle and asked to be taken to United Nations camp in the area.

Instead, they were dropped off at a UN checkpoint where soldiers with the United Nations Peacekeepi­ng Forces in the area took them the rest of the way. After spending the night at the camp, they were flown to the capital on Saturday.

The UN mission’s spokesman tweeted a photo of Blais and Tacchetto, both wearing white UN human rights

T-shirts and sweatpants and smiling, with the caption “They are free.’’ He later tweeted photos of the pair meeting with Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

Al Qaeda and other militant groups have operated in northern Mali for more than a decade and have kidnapped a number of Western hostages, typically holding them until ransoms are paid.

Senior Liberal cabinet ministers met with Blais’ family in Quebec’s Eastern Townships region in January 2019 and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said at the time he believed Blais was still alive.

In March 2019, Human Rights Watch had indicated in a report the pair had been abducted and taken to Mali.

Another Canadian, Kirk Woodman, was found dead in northern Burkina

Faso in 2019, near the border with Mali and Niger. An executive with a Vancouver-based mining company, Woodman had been kidnapped a day earlier by gunmen as he worked on a gold mining project.

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