Handout photo Canadian freelance journalist
Amanda Lindhout, of Sylvan Lake, Alberta, was
abducted in Somalia on Saturday.
25 August 2008
Union joins effort to free Albertan
journalist abducted in Somalia
CWA|SCA Canada has joined an international
effort to win the release of a Canadian journalist
and two colleagues who were kidnapped in Somalia on
the weekend.
Amanda Lindhout is a freelance contributor to the Red
Deer Advocate, where the editorial department is represented
by the Media & Communications Workers of Alberta
(CWA Canada Local 30400).
Jack Wilson, president of the Local,
says that while Lindhout as a freelancer is excluded
from the union, all of her colleagues at the daily
newspaper are very concerned about her. Just over
a week ago, the Advocate published "Africa's
largest slum," a feature that Lindhout had filed
from Kenya.
The International Federation of Journalists
(IFJ) today called for the release of the three freelance
journalists – Lindhout, Australian Nigel Brennan and
Somali Abdifatah Mohammed Elmi and their driver only
named as Mahad – after they were abducted on Saturday
near the Somali capital, Mogadishu.
“This shocking incident underscores the terrible
dangers and threats that continue to face journalists
in Somalia,” said Gabriel Baglo, the Director
of the IFJ Africa office. “We call for them to
be set free immediately. The Somali authorities must
act urgently to see our colleagues come to no harm.”
Lindhout, 27, of Sylvan Lake, AB, is a Baghdad-based
writer and photojournalist who has had significant
experience reporting from the world's trouble spots,
including Iraq and Afghanistan. Currently touring Africa,
she arrived in Somalia last Wednesday with Brennan,
37.
According to IFJ’s affiliate,
the National Union of Somali Journalists (NUSOJ),
Lindhout and Brennan, a long-time friend, were abducted
as they travelled to Afgoye, 25 kilometres from Mogadishu,
to visit camps for refugees. Elmi was helping them
as translator.
The union says that no claim
has yet been made and the kidnappers have not been
identified which has added to concerns. “We are worried about their safety
as we have had no contact with anybody saying they
are holding the journalists and their driver,” said
Omar Faruk Osman, the Secretary General of NUSOJ.
In an email exchange with CWA
Canada Director Arnold Amber, Osman said his group
has "contacted all
warring sides ... (but) they are all giving us an answer
that they are not responsible for the kidnapping."
Osman told Amber that it wasn't yet
clear whether the abduction was for political or financial
purposes. He noted that two Italian humanitarian aid
workers who were kidnapped recently by a militia group
were released after a ransom of $1 million (U.S.) was
paid.
Citing information from the
Australian Department of Foreign Affairs, The
Courier-Mail was reporting today that "negotiations between
Somali authorities and the captors were under way."
A spokeswoman for the department
refused to identify the abductors. She told the newspaper
that doing so would "set the situation back" and be counter-productive
to "talks."