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French Priest Kidnapped In Cameroon's Restive North by greenPHP(m): 8:13am On Nov 15, 2013 |
Yaoundé (AFP) - Armed men abducted a French priest in northern Cameroon, officials and witnesses said Thursday, nine months after Nigerian Islamists kidnapped a family in the same border region. Georges Vandenbeusch, a Roman Catholic priest who moved to the area two years ago, had repeatedly ignored warnings by the French authorities that the region was dangerous. France's foreign ministry said he was snatched overnight from his home near the town of Koza, about 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the Nigerian border. He was kidnapped by around 15 people who burst into his Nguetchewe parish base without a car, said the bishop of the Nanterre diocese near Paris, which has authority over Vandenbeusch. "They first went to the nuns' house to find money, there was none, and Father Georges had the time to warn the embassy," Gerard Daucourt told reporters. Vandenbeusch is 42 and had been working in the area, where the Nigerian Islamist Boko Haram group has operated in the past, since September 2011. French President Francois Hollande said Paris was doing "everything possible" to find and free him, but warned French citizens against putting themselves in harm's way. "I would... ask all of my compatriots who live or travel in what I would qualify as high-risk areas to do nothing to put their lives in danger or to expose themselves to kidnappings," he said on a trip to Monaco. The foreign ministry has designated the area, from where seven members of a French family were kidnapped by Al-Qaeda-linked Boko Haram in February and held hostage for two months, as a dangerous zone prone to militancy and kidnappings. "We had expressly advised him not to stay on but he thought he should remain there," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told AFP during a visit to Morocco. A French diplomatic source, who refused to be identified, warned of an "assassination risk" if his abductors panicked. A nun who worked with Vandenbeusch told AFP the kidnappers spoke English. Although Cameroon is predominantly French-speaking, English is spoken in several areas, notably near the Nigerian frontier. "They spoke English. We think they came on foot. They were not hooded. We do not know what they took from his house. They were alone with him," Sister Francoise told AFP by telephone. Cameroon government spokesman Issa Tchiroma Bakary said Yaounde feared that the priest had already been taken out of the country, though he did not say where to, and added that the kidnap seemed to bear the hallmark of Boko Haram. 'Don't worry, security here is good' Father Henri Djongyang, another priest present at the scene of the kidnap, said Vandenbeusch was locked in his room but the attackers "smashed open the door and ransacked everything." "They were certainly looking for money because the father had a safe in his office. They dragged it to the living room but could not carry it away." They then took the priest "in the direction of Nigeria," he told Europe 1 radio. In another interview to Radio France Internationale, he said a young man had seen the kidnappers make the barefooted priest walk through the village before fleeing with him on motorbikes. Vandenbeusch's former parishioners in the Paris suburb of Sceaux were in shock and a special prayer service was planned for late Thursday. "I've been shaking since I heard the news. I don't think there is any better priest," Catherine said as she lit a candle for Vandenbeusch at Saint-Jean- Baptiste church in Sceaux, where he served for nine years before leaving in 2011 for Cameroon. In a note published in the September parish newsletter, Vandenbeusch had written of fighting and shelling near his home in the border region but said: "Don't worry, security here is good." Chantal Brault, the deputy mayor in Sceaux, said Vandenbeusch knew of the risks. "He chose to take this risk because he felt that he had been very spoilt in Sceaux," Brault said, adding that Vandenbeusch had wanted to pass on his faith to "more complicated parts of the world". The latest kidnapping brings to eight the total number of French hostages held worldwide. Four others are being held in Syria, one in Nigeria and two in the Sahel region on the southern fringes of the Sahara desert. In February, a Frenchman employed by gas group Suez in Yaounde was kidnapped together with his wife, their four children and his brother while visiting a national park just miles from the Nigerian border. They were then taken to neighbouring Nigeria and held by Boko Haram, which is blamed for a string of deadly attacks since 2009 in an insurgency in northern Nigeria. The family was released in April. France denied paying a ransom or launching a military operation to secure their freedom. http://news.yahoo.com/french-priest-kidnapped-cameroon-004258939.html |
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