Houston Chronicle Sunday

Where’s the action for this Houston hostage?

- By Tony Hunter Tony Hunter is chairman and CEO of McClatchy, a news company that publishes in 30 communitie­s across the U.S.

Ten years. An American, a veteran U.S. Marine, a man who became a foreign correspond­ent so that his fellow Americans would know what was happening in Syria, has been missing for 10 years.

President Joe Biden knows about Austin Tice. So did President Donald Trump and President Barack Obama. Some of them engaged; none of them with apparent results.

Trump's team said it had evidence Tice, who worked as a freelance correspond­ent for McClatchy before his capture, was alive, and sent the special presidenti­al envoy for hostage affairs to Damascus to gather informatio­n about him.

Biden's team — after some prodding — agreed to allow Austin's parents, Debra and Marc Tice, to meet with the president in early May.

In that meeting, the Tices say the president asked his team to get a meeting with the Syrians and find out what they want and to work with them to get Austin released. Three months later, and little has changed.

Biden issued a statement this week calling on Syria to bring an end to Austin's captivity and to work with his administra­tion to bring him home.

“There is no higher priority in my Administra­tion than the recovery and return of Americans held hostage or wrongfully detained abroad,” the statement read. “We must name them, keep them in our hearts and minds, and make recovery and return a priority.”

Statements like these are encouragin­g, but words do not amount to action. We need to see action and results.

If the U.S. government has evidence of Austin's whereabout­s and circumstan­ces, it is beyond time to pull out all the stops to reach a solution. That starts with direct engagement with the Syrian government — not working through intermedia­ries or back channels.

For a decade, Austin Tice has been missing from family gatherings, from holidays and celebratio­ns — from moments big and small. As a father and grandfathe­r, my heart breaks for Debra and Marc Tice. They deserve better from their president, from this government.

To my colleagues in the press, do not let Austin Tice be forgotten. Keep asking tough questions and demanding answers until the administra­tion takes action and makes his release a priority.

And to Biden, step up and insist your team find a pathway to Austin's release. Bring Austin Tice home!

 ?? Joseph Eid/AFP/TNS file photo ?? Debra Tice holds a photo of her son, Houston journalist Austin Tice, who was kidnapped in Syria in 2012.
Joseph Eid/AFP/TNS file photo Debra Tice holds a photo of her son, Houston journalist Austin Tice, who was kidnapped in Syria in 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States