Tag: kidnapped

  • Israel Shares Video Of Women Soldiers Being Kidnapped On Oct 7, 2023



    Jerusalem:

    Palestine-based Hamas released four female Israeli soldiers on Saturday as part of the second hostage release of the Gaza ceasefire deal. Karina Ariev, Daniella Gilboa, Naama Levy and Liri Albag were serving as observers at the Nahal Oz army base on the border with Gaza on 7 October, 202, when Hamas attacked Israel and captured them.

    Hours before being released, the four women–dressed in army green– were paraded before a crowd of thousands in Gaza City. They were then transferred to the Red Cross vans, which brought them back home to Israel. In exchange, Israel later released 200 Palestinian prisoners as part of the ceasefire agreement.

    Liri (19), Naama (20), Karina (20), and Daniella (20)  were among the first to be abducted by Hamas-led forces, who killed around 1,200 people and dragged another 250 into the enclave. The first few hours of the assault on the army base were filmed by Hamas forces, which showed the four women in their pyjamas, covered in blood, while they were handcuffed against a wall.

    The video of their capture was rereleased by their families in May in an attempt to increase pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to reach a hostage release deal with Hamas. It was re-released by Israel on Sunday in a post on X, hours after the four women reunited with their families.

    “Hamas wants you to forget the images of  Liri, Daniella, Karina, and Naama on October 7-dragged from their beds in bloodstained pajamas, their hands bound by Hamas terrorists. We will not let this happen,” read the caption of the post.

    In the video, one of the women can be heard telling her captor that she has friends in Palestine. When the Hamas fighter asked them to remain quit, the other woman told him that she wanted to call her friend in Gaza.

    As per media reports, during their 477 days in Hamas captivity, Daniella, Liri, Naama and Karina were kept in civilian apartments and tunnels, in poor sanitary conditions. They were also reportedly forced to cook and clean for their captors, sometimes even while receiving little food for themselves.

    Three other female soldiers –Agam Berger, Noa Marciano and Ori Megidish– were also taken hostage with them. While Megidish was rescued alive by the Israeli military in late October 2023, Marciano was reportedly killed by her captors near al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City. Israel believes Berger is also presumably alive and still in captivity in Gaza. 







    Israel Shares Video Of Women Soldiers Being Kidnapped On Oct 7, 2023

    In a shocking turn of events, Israel has released a video showing a group of women soldiers being kidnapped on October 7, 2023. The video, which was posted on social media, has sparked outrage and concern for the safety of the missing soldiers.

    The footage shows a group of women in military uniform being forced into a vehicle by masked assailants. The women appear visibly distressed and can be heard shouting for help. The Israeli government has confirmed that the women in the video are members of the IDF (Israel Defense Forces) and that they are currently missing.

    The kidnapping has raised concerns about the safety of women serving in the military and has prompted calls for increased security measures to protect them. The Israeli government has vowed to do everything in its power to locate and rescue the missing soldiers.

    As the search for the kidnapped women continues, the international community has expressed solidarity with Israel and offered support in any way possible. Our thoughts are with the families of the missing soldiers during this difficult time.

    Tags:

    1. Israel
    2. Women soldiers
    3. Kidnapping
    4. Video
    5. Oct 7, 2023
    6. IDF
    7. Security
    8. Military
    9. Defense
    10. Breaking news

    #Israel #Shares #Video #Women #Soldiers #Kidnapped #Oct

  • ‘I’m not giving up’: US mother resumes search for reporter son kidnapped in Syria in 2012 | Syria


    Debra Tice had managed to gather her family in one place in early December – no easy feat given they were spread across the US and Australia. When they planned their reunion months before, the Tice family had no idea they would be together to watch the Assad regime fall after a lightning 11-day rebel offensive toppled the 53-year rule.

    “It was amazing for us to be together like that – it doesn’t happen often – to watch that together,” Debra said from a hotel room in Damascus. Only one member of her family was missing from the reunion, her son Austin Tice, a journalist who was kidnapped at the age of 31 in a suburb outside Damascus in 2012, while reporting on the Syrian civil war.

    On Saturday, Debra returned to Damascus after nearly 10 years. Though initially cooperative, the Assad regime stopped issuing her visas in 2015 as she searched for her son, who was believed to have been held by the government itself. Austin would now be 43 years old, after 12 years of captivity.

    The last footage of Tice was posted in 2012, showing the reporter blindfolded, led by men who forced him to recite Islamic prayer before he said, in apparent distress, “Oh Jesus, oh Jesus. God.”

    There are doubts about whether the video was staged to make it look as if Tice was kidnapped by Islamist rebels, rather than the government. Experts said the men in the video were wearing clothes native to Afghanistan, rather than Syria.

    Reporter Austin Tice in Cairo in March 2012. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

    With the Assad regime gone, the search for Tice can resume. Nizar Zakka, the head of Hostage Aid Worldwide (HAW) and a former hostage in Iran, entered Syria a few days after the fall of the regime and began to search for the journalist.

    “You should see the way we enter these security branches, we invade them,” Zakka said. He brought with him a team of 12 cargo pants clad staff members, whom he directs with military-like orders.

    Together, they have spent the last six weeks combing through former branches of state security, military intelligence and even the home of the former head of the Syrian air force intelligence unit, Jamil Hassan. Wherever they think a VIP hostage like Tice might have been held, they are looking for documents, hard drives, anything with his name on it.

    The T-shirt and pins worn by Debra Tice during the unveiling of a #BringAustinHome banner hanging in Washington DC. Photograph: Shawn Thew/EPA

    “As a former hostage myself, I know where to look, where people might write information on the prison walls, where they keep the high-value hostages,” Zakka said.

    So far, the team has not found any documents that pertain to Austin Tice. Their running theory is that the reporter is being held in a Syrian safe house by a high-level regime figure who wants to use Tice as a bargaining chip for their own safe passage outside Syria. Zakka said they had a few leads on where these safe houses may be, but have “nothing concrete”.

    For months, the HAW had run ads on TV and radio inside Syria, urging people to contact them if they had any information on Tice’s whereabouts. Since his detention, no party has produced a proof of life.

    HAW say they believe Tice is alive and well based off various reports they received, including what they say are documents from medical treatments he received during his 12 years of captivity. Former US president Joe Biden also said he believed Tice was alive.

    With new leadership in Washington and Damascus, the Tice family believe that there is renewed hope to find their son.

    “Today is going to be a new day for us, things are going to change … it’s like starting over again, it’s a new beginning after 8 December,” Debra Tice said at a press conference on Monday in Damascus.

    Syria’s de facto leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, right, meeting Debra Tice in Damascus. Photograph: Sana/AFP/Getty Images

    She added that Trump administration officials had already contacted her regarding Austin, and she had met the de facto leader of Syria, Ahmed al-Sharaa, to discuss his case the day before.

    The Tice family is facing the same challenges that Syrian families of the more than 100,000 forcibly disappeared who did not emerge from Assad’s detention centres have encountered since the fall of the regime.

    Prison facilities which hold crucial documentation are not being safeguarded. Looting, busted water pipes and neglect have led to thousands of missing documents.

    The Assad regime’s security apparatuses took meticulous notes and its various branches are stuffed with documents. Human rights organisations fear that if not safeguarded, key information that could help people find their loved ones could be lost.

    “The priority right now is to close all the security centres and not allow anyone in. We need everyone who took documents to return them,” said Bayan Rehan, a member of the Families for Freedom association whose brother was arrested by the Assad regime.

    Sharaa has yet to meet with a representative from Syrian associations like Families for Freedom and they do not have the same resources that the Tice family has been able to mobilise.

    The UN created an Independent Institution on Missing Persons in the Syrian Arab Republic in the summer of 2023, but the commission has yet to deploy a team on the ground due to lack of funds.

    “We’re used to the UN not helping us,” Rehan said with a shrug.

    Debra Tice left Damascus on Tuesday, but work to find her son, and other people forcibly disappeared by the Assad regime, continues.

    “Austin, if you can somehow hear this, I love you. I know you’re not giving up and neither am I,” she said.



    It has been nearly a decade since American journalist Austin Tice was kidnapped in Syria while reporting on the conflict in 2012. Despite the passage of time, his mother Debra is not giving up hope.

    In a recent interview, Debra Tice expressed her determination to continue the search for her son, who was just 31 years old when he disappeared. She remains steadfast in her belief that Austin is still alive and is being held captive somewhere in Syria.

    Debra has tirelessly advocated for her son’s release, working with the US government, media outlets, and international organizations to keep Austin’s case in the public eye. She refuses to let her son become another forgotten victim of the Syrian conflict.

    As she continues to fight for Austin’s freedom, Debra Tice is urging anyone who may have information about her son’s whereabouts to come forward. She remains hopeful that one day, she will be reunited with her beloved son.

    Despite the challenges and uncertainties that lie ahead, Debra’s unwavering determination serves as a reminder that the search for Austin Tice is far from over. She is not giving up, and neither should we. Let us stand with her in solidarity as she continues to seek justice for her son. #FreeAustinTice #Syria #Journalism #Hope

    Tags:

    1. US mother
    2. Kidnapped reporter
    3. Syria
    4. Search for son
    5. Resumes search
    6. Missing journalist
    7. Syria conflict
    8. US journalist
    9. Family search
    10. Hopeful mother

    #giving #mother #resumes #search #reporter #son #kidnapped #Syria #Syria

  • Man who kidnapped California woman in what was initially called a hoax faces new charges

    Man who kidnapped California woman in what was initially called a hoax faces new charges


    SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) — A man who kidnapped and sexually assaulted a Northern California woman in what became widely known as the “Gone Girl” kidnapping has been charged with two 15-year-old home invasion sexual assaults, prosecutors announced Monday.

    Prosecutors allege Matthew Muller, 47, broke into a woman’s home in Mountain View, California, in September 2009, attacked her, tied her up and made her drink medications. He then told the woman in her 30s that he was going to rape her, but she convinced him not to, prosecutors said. Muller left after recommending the woman get a dog.

    The following month, prosecutors say he broke into a home in Palo Alto, California, bound and gagged a woman and forced her to drink Nyquil. He started assaulting the woman in her 30s, but she also convinced him to stop, prosecutors said.

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    Muller has been charged with two felony counts of committing a sexual assault during a home invasion. The charges carry a possible sentence of life in prison. He is currently serving a 40-year prison term for the 2015 kidnapping.

    “The details of this person’s violent crime spree seem scripted for Hollywood, but they are tragically real,” District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. “Our goal is to make sure this defendant is held accountable and will never hurt or terrorize anyone ever again. Our hope is that this nightmare is over.”

    Muller’s lawyer, public defender Agustin Arias, said they have no comment about the new charges.

    The new charges came after testing evidence based on a “new lead,” according to prosecutors. District attorney criminalists found Muller’s DNA on straps he used to bind one of the victims, officials said.

    Muller, a disbarred, Harvard-educated attorney, pleaded guilty to the 2015 kidnapping of Denise Huskins. He was also sentenced in 2022 to 31 years in state prison after pleading no contest to two counts of forcible rape of Huskins.

    Huskins was abducted by a masked intruder who broke into her boyfriend’s home in Vallejo, a city in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her boyfriend, Aaron Quinn, told detectives he woke up to a bright light on his face and that intruders had drugged, blindfolded and tied both of them up before kidnapping Huskins in the middle of the night. Quinn also said the kidnappers were demanding an $8,500 ransom.

    A Vallejo police detective interrogated Quinn for hours, at times suggesting he may have been involved in Huskins’ disappearance. Quinn took a polygraph test which an FBI agent told him he failed, the couple said later in a book about their ordeal.

    Huskins, who was 29 at the time, turned up unharmed two days later outside her father’s apartment in Huntington Beach, a city in Southern California, where she said she was dropped off. She reappeared just hours before the ransom was due.

    That same day, police in Vallejo announced in a news conference that they had found no evidence of a kidnapping and accused Huskins and Quinn of faking the abduction, which spurred a massive search.

    After Huskins’ release, Vallejo police erroneously likened her kidnapping to the book and movie “Gone Girl,” in which a woman goes missing and then lies about being kidnapped when she reappears.

    Investigators dropped that theory after Muller was arrested by police in Dublin, California, for a similar home invasion. Authorities said they found a cellphone that they traced to Muller and a subsequent search of a car and home turned up evidence, including a computer Muller stole from Quinn, linking the disbarred attorney to the abduction.



    In a shocking turn of events, the man who allegedly kidnapped a California woman in what was initially believed to be a hoax is now facing new charges. The woman, who was reported missing earlier this month, was found safe and unharmed after being held captive for several days.

    Authorities have now charged the suspect with kidnapping, false imprisonment, and assault with a deadly weapon. The incident has left many in the community shaken and questioning the motives behind the alleged abduction.

    As more details emerge, it is becoming clear that this was not a simple case of a hoax gone wrong. The victim’s harrowing ordeal has shed light on the dangers that many women face on a daily basis.

    This case serves as a stark reminder of the importance of staying vigilant and looking out for one another. It also highlights the crucial role that law enforcement plays in keeping our communities safe.

    As the investigation continues, our thoughts are with the victim and her loved ones as they navigate this difficult time. We can only hope that justice will be served and that steps will be taken to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future.

    Tags:

    1. California kidnapping case
    2. Hoax turned kidnapping
    3. Kidnapping suspect faces new charges
    4. California woman abduction case
    5. Kidnapping investigation update
    6. Suspect charged in California abduction
    7. California woman found after alleged hoax
    8. New charges in California kidnapping case
    9. Abduction case developments
    10. Kidnapper arrested in California hoax-turned-abduction

    #Man #kidnapped #California #woman #initially #called #hoax #faces #charges

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