Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Philippines Seeks To Rescue Hostages, Including 2 Canadians

The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2016 11:15 AM
    MANILA, Philippines — Philippine forces were moving in an effort to rescue two Canadians and a Norwegian after their Muslim militant captors threatened to behead one of them if a huge ransom was not paid by Monday afternoon, officials said.
     
    It now is early Tuesday in the Philippines.
     
    Government forces have not ascertained what happened to the hostages after the deadline set by the Abu Sayyaf militants lapsed, Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla said, adding intelligence indicated all the captives were well two days ago.
     
    The kidnappers have reportedly demanded 300 million pesos ($6.5 million US) for each of the foreigners, who were seized with a Filipino woman in September last year from a marina on southern Samal Island, sparking a massive search. They earlier demanded a larger ransom.
     
    The hostages were believed to have been taken to Jolo Island in Sulu, a jungled province where the militants are believed to be holding several captives, including 14 Indonesian and four Malaysian crewmen, who were successively abducted at gunpoint from three tugboats starting last month.
     
    "Maximum efforts are being exerted ... to effect the rescue," the military and police said in a joint statement without divulging details of the rescue operation, which was ordered by President Benigno Aquino III.
     
     
    About 400 Abu Sayyaf militants were involved in the kidnappings, it said.
     
    In militant videos posted online, Canadians John Ridsdel and Robert Hall, Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad and Filipino Marites Flor were shown sitting in a clearing with heavily armed militants standing behind them. In some of the videos, a militant aimed a long knife on Ridsdel's neck. Two black flags hang in the backdrop of lush foliage.
     
    The abductions highlight the long-running security problems that have hounded the southern Philippines, a region with bountiful resources but which also suffers from poverty, lawlessness and decades-long Muslim and communist insurgencies.
     
    The Abu Sayyaf started an alarming trend of large-scale abductions after it emerged in the early 1990s as an offshoot of the decades-long separatist rebellion by minority Muslims in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation's south.
     
    It has been weakened by more than a decade of Philippine offensives but has endured largely from huge ransom payments and extortion. The United States and the Philippines have separately blacklisted the group for kidnappings, beheadings and bombings.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air Canada Machinists Accept New Contract

    Their union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace, says the deal provides job protection to the 75-hundred workers for the next decade.

    Air Canada Machinists Accept New Contract

    Newsroom On The Picket Line At Halifax Chronicle Herald After Talks Fail

    Newsroom On The Picket Line At Halifax Chronicle Herald After Talks Fail
    HALIFAX — Roughly two dozen newsroom employees at Canada's largest independent daily newspaper held signs and waved to honking cars on the first day of a strike.

    Newsroom On The Picket Line At Halifax Chronicle Herald After Talks Fail

    1 Person Dead After Shooting Related To 'Criminal Activity' In Port Coquitlam

    1 Person Dead After Shooting Related To 'Criminal Activity' In Port Coquitlam
    RCMP responded just after 9 p.m. Friday (to the area of the 2100-block of Rindall Avenue) after reports of shots fired.

    1 Person Dead After Shooting Related To 'Criminal Activity' In Port Coquitlam

    Suspicious Death In Langley Hotel, Integrated Homicide Investigation Team Probe

    Suspicious Death In Langley Hotel, Integrated Homicide Investigation Team Probe
    Langley RCMP responded on Friday afternoon to the hotel, where a man was found deceased in one of the rooms.

    Suspicious Death In Langley Hotel, Integrated Homicide Investigation Team Probe

    Travis Scheerschmidt, Man Who Fatally Stabbed Alberta Caregiver As Teen Sentenced As Adult

    Travis Scheerschmidt, Man Who Fatally Stabbed Alberta Caregiver As Teen Sentenced As Adult
    The judge ruled Scheerschmidt, now 21, should serve his sentence as an adult.

    Travis Scheerschmidt, Man Who Fatally Stabbed Alberta Caregiver As Teen Sentenced As Adult

    Judge Grants Federal Lawyers Adjournment In Kinder Morgan Challenge

    Lawyers for Tsleil-Waututh Nation have been asking the Federal Court of Appeal to stop the NEB review of the $5.4-billion project, arguing the band wasn't properly consulted.

    Judge Grants Federal Lawyers Adjournment In Kinder Morgan Challenge