Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Ottawa working to free 2 Canadians held hostage in Iraq

Last Updated: Monday, November 28, 2005 | 2:34 PM ET

Efforts continued in Iraq on Monday to help locate two Canadians taken hostage in the country.

The Canadians were among four people – all humanitarian workers – who disappeared.

Media reports say the other two hostages are a British man believed to be in his 70s, and an American. A British Foreign Office spokeswoman has identified the missing Briton as Norman Kember.

Dan McTeague, parliamentary secretary to the minister of  Foreign Affairs.
Dan McTeague, parliamentary secretary to the minister of Foreign Affairs.

Canada's Defence Minister Bill Graham says the government will do everything it can to help free the hostages. He did not provide any details.

Foreign Affairs spokesperson Rodney Moore told CBC.ca on Monday that the department is "closely monitoring the situation." It is "not giving any names," of the individuals involved, he said, since "we have to respect the families" of the people taken hostage.

Moore also said the kidnapping is "a reminder of the prevailing continued dangers in Iraq." Apart from that, Moore said Foreign Affairs "can't comment further."

On Sunday, Dan McTeague, the parliamentary secretary to the minister of Foreign Affairs, told CBC News that the Canadian Embassy in Amman, in neighbouring Jordan, was contacted about the abductions on Saturday. Canada doesn't have an embassy in Iraq.

McTeague said the aid agency involved had asked that no one reveal its name, those of the hostages or other details of the abduction, fearing the hostages' lives could be further endangered.

The abduction starkly illustrated the dangers in the Mideast country, said McTeague.

Warned about travel in Iraq

Ottawa issued a warning in April 2004 warning all Canadians to avoid travelling and working in Iraq.

"We have for some time now advised Canadians not to go there: it's for good reason," said McTeague.

"Once there, and if you end up in this kind of a situation, it is entirely conceivable that your government may not be able to help"

Despite the government's advice that Iraq is not a safe location, some Canadian aid agencies are at work there.

A Toronto-based spokesperson for a Christian aid group, Doug Pritchard, wouldn't say whether any of his four workers in Iraq were missing.

"We believe there's a better way out of this than perpetuating the violence which has been so endemic in the region," he told CBC News.

"And we're willing to take the risks to try and live that out."

More than 200 foreigners have been abducted in Iraq in the past 1½ years.

Four of them were Canadians, including Fairuz Yamulky, a Vancouver woman who was held captive by Iraqi militants for more than two weeks in September 2004 before she escaped.

But another Canadian, Zaid Meerwali, who had dual Canadian-Iraqi citizenship, was killed by hostage-takers in August.

Michel Juneau-Katsuya, a former senior intelligence officer with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), predicted it would be difficult to determine who is behind the latest abductions.

"It will be very difficult in this particular case because there are also Americans and British that were kidnapped at the same period of time," Juneau-Katsuya said.

"All those representatives are coming from countries that have been identified by [Osama] bin Laden as targets for al-Qaeda."

Related

Audio

Margaret Evans reports for CBC Radio (Runs: 1:26)
play:  RealMedia »

Video

David Common reports for CBC-TV
(Runs: 2:02)

play: RealMedia »
play: RealVideo »
play: QuickTime »

More World Headlines »

Democrats take Virginia, Senate
The Democratic Party seized control of the U.S. Congress Wednesday night for the first time in a dozen years after picking up a sixth and final Senate gain in Virginia.
Bush and Pelosi make nice as Democratic victory sinks in
U.S. Democratic party leaders and President George W. Bush made conciliatory noises on Wednesday in the wake of mid-term election results.
Rumsfeld resigns as U.S. defence secretary
U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who has overseen the execution of the unpopular war in Iraq, is stepping down in the wake of major Democrat gains in the mid-term elections.
Activists say S. Africa ready to take AIDS seriously
The South African government, long reluctant to face up to the country's overwhelming number of AIDS deaths and infections, has changed its stance and is taking the disease seriously, AIDS activists said Wednesday.
Saddam to be executed by year end: Iraqi PM
Iraq's prime minister says he expects Saddam Hussein will be executed before the end of the year.
Story Tools: E-MAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Democrats take Virginia, Senate
The Democratic Party seized control of the U.S. Congress Wednesday night for the first time in a dozen years after picking up a sixth and final Senate gain in Virginia.
Bush and Pelosi make nice as Democratic victory sinks in
U.S. Democratic party leaders and President George W. Bush made conciliatory noises on Wednesday in the wake of mid-term election results.
Rumsfeld resigns as U.S. defence secretary
U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who has overseen the execution of the unpopular war in Iraq, is stepping down in the wake of major Democrat gains in the mid-term elections.
more »

Canada »

Tories, Liberals in dead heat, poll finds
Despite having no leader, the Liberal party is in a statistical dead heat with the Conservatives in support from Canadians, according to a new CBC News survey.
Prison tab will jump with stiffer gun laws: Toews
Ottawa will have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on new prisons for extra convictions under the Tory government's proposed gun laws, the justice minister says.
Gang killings behind highest homicide rate in decade
A jump in gang-related killings increased the national homicide rate in 2005 to its highest point in nearly a decade, according to Statistics Canada.
more »

Health »

No difference in heart disease risk from low-carb diet: study
Low-carb diets defy traditional weight loss advice but do not seem be linked to a higher risk of heart disease in women, according to a long-term study published Thursday.
Beware: 'Tis the season to fall from ladders
Be careful stringing up those Christmas lights or cleaning out the gutter: November is the peak month for visiting emergency rooms because of falls from ladders.
Medical students may lack basic surgery skills, survey suggests
Some graduating medical students in Canada say they have not learned basic surgical principles that all physicians should know, a study suggests.
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

14 Canadian books on long list for IMPAC Dublin Award
Fourteen books by Canadian writers, including Margaret Atwood's The Penelopiad and 2005 Giller winner The Time in Between by David Bergen, are on the long list for the International IMPAC Dublin Award for 2007.
Cosby, Canadian woman settle lawsuit over alleged assault
Bill Cosby has settled a civil lawsuit with a Canadian woman who said the comedian drugged and sexually assaulted her at his home.
Furtado plays herself on Portuguese soap
Nelly Furtado made a guest appearance on a popular Portuguese soap opera and told local television she wants to move into acting.
more »

Technology & Science »

Ottawa backing genetic exports
The federal government is trying to boost genetic exports from the dairy industry, including living animals, semen and embryos.
Spider, chili peppers share hot property
Venom from a kind of West Indian tarantula and the ingredient that makes chili peppers hot both target the same nerve cells in mice, a U.S. researcher reports.
Milky Way's origin still murky
Research by the European Southern Observatory has raised questions about commonly accepted theory explaining the formation of the Milky Way, the galaxy that includes Earth.
more »

Money »

OSC looking into RIM stock options
The Ontario Securities Commission has launched a probe of Research in Motion's stock option grants, the regulator confirmed Wednesday.
Multi-unit construction boosts housing starts
Housing starts rose in October, despite a drop in the pace of construction of single-family homes, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reported Wednesday.
Extendicare to go ahead with REIT conversion
Shares of Extendicare Inc. were up almost seven per cent in late-morning trading Wednesday on the TSX after the company said it will proceed with a conversion to a real-estate investment trust.
more »

Consumer Life »

MPs reject food labelling bill
Canadian restaurants won't have to begin listing calorie counts after the Commons voted to reject mandatory food labelling on Wednesday night.
Think sales save you money? Think again, study says
Forget lists and budgets, the powerful emotions of revenge and gratitude are the true determinants of how we shop, a new study suggests.
Nut-nappers' heists send almond, walnut prices soaring
As prices for almonds and walnuts rise with demand, a growing black market has emboldened nut-nappers in the U.S. to cut holes in fences, sneak into distribution centres and drive off with truckloads of nuts.
more »

Sports »

Scores: NHL CFL MLB

Senators drop 5th straight
The Ottawa Senators blew a pair of two-goal leads in the second period on the way to their fifth consecutive loss, 5-4 to the hometown Atlanta Thrashers on Wednesday night.
Oilers bow to Red Wings
Dominik Hasek made 16 saves as the Detroit Red Wings blanked the Edmonton Oilers 3-0 on Wednesday.
Bosh, Raptors sink Sixers
Chris Bosh's three-pointer with 6.1 seconds left lifted the Toronto Raptors over the Philadelphia 76ers 106-104 on Wednesday.
more »