Part I
Background
Chapter 2
Background
2.1
Kidnapping for ransom occurs more often in conflict prone areas where
security is fragile, law enforcement is weak and poverty pronounced. In this
chapter, the committee provides a brief overview of the incidence of kidnapping
for ransom worldwide, including cases involving Australian citizens.
Kidnapping worldwide
2.2
Kidnappings are often categorised according to whether the motive of the
hostage takers is criminal or political in nature. Criminal motives are those
where the intention of the hostage takers is to obtain a material ransom or
gain from a business or family. Political motives are those where the intention
of the kidnapping is to further the aims of a political group or movement
through the targeting of a particular organisation, institution or individual
or through ransom demands to help fund the activities of the group. These two
motives can be and often are combined.
2.3
For people driven by ideological motives, such as terrorist groups,
kidnapping can be an effective propaganda tool to draw attention to their cause
and to intimidate politicians to make concessions, such as the release of
imprisoned followers or sympathisers. If a ransom is demanded and paid, it
provides a source of funding that enables the perpetrators to sustain and grow
their organisation.[1]
According to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF):[2]
Ransoms resulting from KFR [kidnap for ransom] enables
terrorist groups to recruit and indoctrinate new members, acquire sophisticated
weapons and communications gear such as satellite phones, establish training
camps and support units, including 'safe houses' and transportation operations,
as well as provide financial resources which can be used to bribe government
officials, law enforcement personnel and others who can be of use to a
terrorist organisation in conducting its nefarious activities.[3]
2.4
Importantly, the demand for money can be a lucrative business. Clayton
Consultants noted that:
Contrary to others, the kidnap industry is not subject to the
volatile upswings and downswings of market conditions. Not only is it
profitable, but when planned properly, it requires very little investment for a
high yield of return. No part of the world is immune and its composition is in
a constant state of flux, adapting to the local security conditions.[4]
2.5
Whatever the motives, each kidnapping is unique. It can take place in any
country or region which has its own particular law and order regime, geography
and political, economic and social environment. A kidnapping involves perpetrators
who may be experienced, well-organised hostage-takers, members of a hardened
criminal network or complete amateurs. Their temperaments and expectations will
differ and their actions driven by financial or ideological motives or a
combination of both.[5]
Indeed, criminals may exchange their captives with terrorists for money.[6]
Their victims will vary in age, gender, religion, state of health, education, nationality
and profession and their reaction to kidnapping and confinement will be
different and may fluctuate as their detainment continues. The relationship
that develops between the hostage taker and their hostages will depend on a
range of variables, including those cited above, and will likely change over
time according to the response to the kidnappers' demands.
Information on kidnapping incidents
2.6
Available statistics on incidents of kidnapping for the purpose of
obtaining a ransom, including a political concession, indicate that such
activity remains a major concern and will continue to be so.[7]
It should be noted, however, that accurate information on kidnapping incidents
is difficult to obtain due to a number of factors specific to the nature of the
crime, including:
- the difficulty inherent in gaining reliable information in the
areas of violent conflict where many kidnappings occur such as Somalia and
Colombia;
- many victims do not report kidnappings for personal reasons,
particularly a fear of retaliation by the hostage takers;
- many kidnappings occur between or within criminal groups and
activities meaning that there is little likelihood such incidents would be
reported to police or other authorities; and
- different ways of defining and recording kidnapping incidents
across different jurisdictions; for example, in Argentina, 'express
kidnappings' involving a randomly selected victim and small amounts of ransom
(often paid by the victims themselves) are recorded by some police
jurisdictions as 'aggravated robberies'.[8]
2.7
One witness told the committee in camera that the companies that assist
in negotiating the release of hostages do not publish the details of their
cases.[9]
Estimates as to the number of kidnappings worldwide range from 12,000 each year
to between 20,000 and 30,000 reported cases a year.[10]
The number of incidents, particularly involving foreigners, is increasing.[11]
2.8
The National Counterterrorism Center's 2008 report on terrorism noted
that the terrorist use of kidnappings for ransom increased significantly in
that year.[12]
Clayton Consultants found that in 2009 'political and economic turmoil, the war
on drugs, stabilization efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan, revitalised
insurgencies and failed states continued to be the underlying precursors to the
kidnapping industry'. It reported:
Drug-related kidnappings increased in Mexico, particularly in
its border areas. While FARC-related kidnappings decreased in Colombia,
opportunism kidnappings exploded in neighbouring Venezula. The failed-state
syndrome in Somalia continues to fuel piracy. Increases in kidnappings were a
direct result of the political crisis in Nigeria, Honduras and Kenya.
Afghanistan and Iraq are seeing shifts in kidnappings towards the local
population. And a resurgent Abu Sayyaf gang turned to high-profile kidnappings
in the southern Philippines.[13]
High risk countries and targets
2.9
The National Counterterrorism Center's 2010 report on terrorism recorded
that Somalia had the highest number of kidnapping victims with 1,305, followed
by the Gaza strip with 1,058 and then Afghanistan with 951.[14]
Kidnapping targets
2.10
No one is immune from being kidnapped and held for ransom. Kidnap gangs
do not necessarily target wealthy individuals and business executives. Although
people from all walks of life and nationalities have fallen prey to
hostage-takers, victims of kidnap and ransom, however, can be grouped into
broad categories.
Expatriate workers and business
people
2.11
Over the years, numerous expatriate oil workers have been kidnapped in
Nigeria and indeed, for a number of years this country has led Africa in the
number of kidnapped expatriates.[15]
Although the major oil companies deny involvement in ransom payouts, there are
estimates of payments in the vicinity of £450,000 per kidnap victim.[16]
According to Clayton Consultants' 2010 report, most kidnappings in Nigeria
traditionally occurred in the Niger Delta with oil company employees as the
preferred targets. It noted, however, that while this region remained a 'hot
zone' for expatriates and a rich target for criminal elements, there was a
notable shift toward wealthy locals and other prominent members of Nigerian
society.[17]
Aid workers and journalists
2.12
Aid workers, who tend to be a visible and soft target, are also vulnerable
to hostage-takers. Recent reports have highlighted growing concerns about
attacks against aid workers including kidnapping. Indeed, one report noted that
of all means of violence recorded in aid worker attacks, two stand alone as on
the rise—kidnappings and the use of major explosives. These tactics
proliferated in Afghanistan and Pakistan.[18]
The report stated that, even as incidents in general have fallen off, the
nearly four-fold rise in kidnappings since 2005, 'speaks to the multiple
incentives it offers in economic gains and political leverage'.[19]
2.13
According to statistics gathered by the AKE Group, over 20 foreign aid
workers and UNAMID peacekeepers have been kidnapped in the Sudan since March
2009.[20]
The surge in abductions has significantly restricted aid operations, forcing
foreigners to relocate to main towns and avoid travelling to rural areas in
need.[21]
A UN report released at the beginning of this year found:
Kidnappings—including incidents where the victims were
killed, in addition to the more common outcome of victims being released
alive—remained the fastest growing type of attack affecting aid workers, even
as other tactics such as armed break-ins and violent road banditry dropped off
as organisations instituted tighter and more protective security measures and
restricted movement in some areas.[22]
2.14
Journalists, whose job is to report on developments in volatile or war
torn and highly dangerous areas, are also at risk of kidnapping. Similar to aid
workers, they are often targeted by hostage-takers for monetary or political
benefit. For example, in Afghanistan journalists and politicians are often the
most publicised cases. Over the last decade there have been a number of high
profile kidnappings. In September 2001, Yvonne Ridley, a British journalist,
was captured by the Taliban and released after ten days on a promise that she
would study Islam. The following year, while pursuing a story about Islamic
militants in Pakistan, Daniel Pearl was abducted and executed by his captors.
In 2008, militants captured David Rohde, a New York Times journalist and
detained him for around seven months before he managed to escape.[23]
At the end of the second quarter of 2010 at least three foreign reporters—two
French and one Japanese—remained in Taliban captivity.[24]
The French reporters were finally released after being held hostage for 547
days.[25]
Tourists
2.15
Tourists are also the targets of kidnappers.[26]
For example in 2009, a group of four Western tourists—German, Swiss and UK
nationals—was kidnapped while on holiday in West Africa. They were returning
from a cultural festival when their convoy of SUVs was attacked and they were
taken hostage. A ransom was demanded. The UK national was executed and a
follow-up ransom was issued. The three remaining hostages were later released
at different intervals.[27]
2.16
Foreign affairs departments, travel agents and insurance companies issue
travel warnings regularly to alert tourists to the risk of kidnappings in
certain countries or regions of particular countries. For example, the United
States Bureau of Consular Services recently urged travellers to Colombia to
exercise care:
...terrorist groups such as the Revolutionary Armed Forces of
Colombia (FARC), the National Liberation Army (ELN), and other criminal
organizations continue to kidnap and hold civilians for ransom or as political
bargaining chips...Kidnapping remains a serious threat, with two kidnapping cases
of U.S. citizens reported since August 2010. One kidnapped citizen was rescued
within 4 days and the other case resulted in the murder of the victim.
Kidnapping in rural areas is of particular concern.[28]
2.17
DFAT noted that the over the last decade there has been steady increases
in the numbers of Australians going abroad for 'adventure tourism'. This
enthusiasm for travelling to exotic, remote and sometimes risky locations is
consistent with an international trend.[29]
DFAT stated that cultural festivals, especially those held in north and west
Africa, are 'attractive places for terrorists and criminals to identify and
target tourists for kidnapping'. These festivals bring people to predictable
locations along unsecured routes. DFAT strongly advises Australians not to
attend major festivals such as the Tuareg ‘Festival in the Desert’ and the
‘Sahara Nights’ festival in northern Mali and the Tamadach Festival in Eastern
Mali.[30]
Piracy
2.18
Most recently the escalating incidences of piracy have raised concerns. The
waters off Somalia and the Gulf of Guinea are the most high risk areas for
piracy attacks and there is concern about the growing propensity to use
violence when seizing ships and their crews.[31]
As at 3 March 2011, 33 vessels were being held off the coast of Somalia,
including one that was converted for use as a pirate 'mother ship'.[32]
It should also be noted that not all vessels hijacked and held for ransom are
large commercial vessels, some can be smaller fishing boats and yachts. A
recent study observed:
In cases involving fishing boats and sailing yachts, the
owners often do not have the financial resources to pay ransoms and,
particularly in the case of yachts, lack insurance coverage as well.
Consequently, persons captured on smaller vessels are likely to be held captive
for longer periods of time.[33]
2.19
Mr Jack Lang, a special adviser to the Secretary-General, reported to
the Security Council in January 2011 that nearly 2000 hostages had been taken
in two years:
We have seen the industrialization of the phenomenon, an
increasing number of pirates, sophisticated operations, the increasing use of
mother ships, the latest technology, such as GPS, heavy weaponry, better
organization during attacks, seizures and the negotiation of ransoms, and the
gradual emergence of a true industry and new professions linked to piracy,
including intermediaries, negotiators and interpreters.[34]
2.20
Three piracy attacks were reported in the last quarter of 2010 in the
Gulf of Guinea although, according to the AKE Group, 'the actual number could
be higher as such incidents are heavily under-reported'. It noted that usually
the pirates, armed with guns and knives, board a vessel and demand cash and
belongings. If hostages are taken they are likely to be held on the mainland
until a ransom is paid.[35]
2.21
The President of the United Nations General Assembly in May 2010 noted
that the payment of ransom to free hostages and ships has 'created an incentive
for Somalis to engage in piracy'. He concluded that the problem of piracy 'if
not addressed urgently and effectively, would spiral out of control and lead to
further serious global consequences'.[36]
DFAT noted the most recent cases where Somali pirates have actually gone into
Kenyan territory and taken tourists.[37]
Outcomes
2.22
The vast majority of reported kidnap incidents worldwide are resolved
with the release of the victim though an estimated 6% of incidents result in
the death of the hostage.[38]
One firm with expertise in kidnap response estimated that ransoms are paid in
around 64% of cases, and only 18% are released without any form of payment.
Around 10% of hostages are rescued and an estimated 2% are able to escape their
captors.[39]
Australians kidnapped overseas
2.23
Being kidnapped and held for ransom is a real and persistent threat for
many Australians who live, work and travel abroad. The small but significant
number of Australians who have been involved in kidnapping incidents overseas
in recent decades reflect the diverse range of circumstances under which
kidnappings occur worldwide. The cases differ by location and by the
motivations and demands of the hostage takers.
2.24
The majority of Australians who have been kidnapped and held for ransom
overseas since 1994 have been in Africa, particularly in Nigeria where a large
number of Australians are employed in the oil industry. Australians have also
been kidnapped in Iraq, Afghanistan, Gaza, Colombia, Cambodia, Yemen, Russia,
Turkey and India.
2.25
Most Australians who have been taken hostage have been released.
However, a number have tragically died including Andrew Thirsk, kidnapped with
a tour group in Yemen in 1998 and killed during the rescue attempt by Yemeni
government forces, and the separate kidnappings and murders of David Wilson and
Kellie Wilkinson by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia in 1994.
2.26
There have been at least 30 reported kidnapping incidents involving
Australians overseas since the deaths of Kellie Wilkinson and David Wilson. In
information provided to the committee, the Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (DFAT) has listed 11 cases that it was aware of dating from 1996 (DFAT
acknowledges that there be other cases in situations that have been resolved
without any request for government assistance). Information from other sources
including newspaper reports and press releases suggests a further 20 cases of
Australians being kidnapped overseas in that period (see Appendix 4 for a list
of Australians who have been kidnapped overseas since 2001). The reported
kidnapping incidents involving Australians that have occurred over the last
seven years in chronological order are:
- 2004—Iraq: Robert Colvill, an American-Australian sound engineer
for NBC was kidnapped with three colleagues in Fallujah. He was released three
days later after the NBC reportedly paid a ransom.[40]
- 2004—Iraq: Two Australian security guards were reportedly taken
hostage with their clients by a group known as the 'Horror Brigades of the
Islamic Secret Army' in September. The group demanded that Australian forces be
withdrawn from Iraq. The kidnapping was never confirmed but media reports
stated that an SAS team was dispatched to Iraq and that an AFP team specially
trained for hostage crises in the Middle-East was on standby.[41]
- 2004—Iraq: Sheik Mohamed Alsibiyani (also known as Mohammed Naji)
was held by Sunni insurgents for four days before being released. The hostage
takers demanded a ransom but the Sheik was eventually released after they took
the cash he was carrying.[42]
- 2004—Iraq: John Martinkus, journalist, kidnapped with two local
companions outside his hotel in Baghdad and held for 20 hours by Sunni
insurgents before being released.[43]
- 2005—Iraq: Douglas Wood, engineer, kidnapped with two Iraqi
colleagues on 30 April in Baghdad by the Shura Council of the Mujahadeen of
Iraq. The hostage takers demanded that Australian forces leave Iraq. An
'emergency response' team was dispatched from Australia to Iraq. Wood was
released by Iraqi forces during a 'random' operation on 15 June 2005. His two
colleagues had been killed at an earlier date by the hostage takers.[44]
- 2005—Gaza: Brian Ambrosio, deputy principal at a private American
school, was kidnapped with a Dutch colleague in December by a group connected
to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. He was released unharmed
after being held for two days.[45]
- 2006—Gaza: Kaye Bennett and Oles Shchyrytsya were abducted with
seven other foreigners at the American International School at Beit Lahiya in
Gaza. They were held for two hours before being released at a nearby police
station after the captors determined that none of the hostages was American.[46]
- 2007—Nigeria: Jason Lane, oil worker, was kidnapped with four
other foreign contractors on 4 July from an oil rig operated by Shell in the
Niger Delta. The hostages were released after seven days.[47]
- 2007—Mali: Des Gregor, farmer, was kidnapped after travelling to
Bamako to meet a woman he had met over the internet whom he believed would be
his bride. He was held by a criminal gang who demanded a ransom of $100,000
from Mr Gregor's friends and family in Australia. Mr Gregor was held for 12
days before AFP negotiators persuaded the kidnappers that there was money to be
collected by the captive from the Canadian Embassy in Bamako. The gang released
Mr Gregor near the embassy and he was rescued by police.[48]
- 2008–09—Somalia: an Australian with dual nationality kidnapped
with colleagues working for an NGO. Their employer conducted negotiations with
the support of a private security firm and the hostages were released after an
estimated ransom of US$4.1 million was paid. The family requested that his
Australian nationality not be disclosed at any point in the negotiations.[49]
- 2008–09—Somalia: Nigel Brennan, photo journalist, kidnapped with
Canadian journalist, Amanda Lindhout, and a number of Somali nationals on 23
August 2008 outside Mogadishu. Hostage takers demanded a multi-million dollar
ransom. Somali nationals were released in January 2009. Brennan and Lindhout
were released on 25 November 2009 after their families engaged a private
security firm and paid ransom of around US$600,000.[50]
- 2009—The Gambia: Justin Liebig, lured by a scam and kidnapped on
2 February. He was freed on 10 February after a reported €5,000 in ransom was paid.
DFAT and the Australian Federal Police officers were reportedly sent to The
Gambia to assist with investigations. Gambian police arrested the kidnappers
and recovered most of the ransom.[51]
- 2011—East Africa: Australian ship captain with dual nationality
taken hostage with crew by Somali pirates in February. Captain, crew and vessel
were released two months later after ransom was paid by the shipping company.[52]
2.27
Fortunately, the incidence of Australians being kidnapped and held for
ransom overseas is infrequent. Nonetheless, the global trend in this type of
crime suggests that Australia must be prepared for another event.
Conclusion
2.28
Although the ultimate aim of the Australian government is to secure the
safe and expeditious release of its citizens who are kidnapped and held for
ransom, its response depends on many factors. They include the existence of
international conventions, humanitarian considerations such as the safety of
the hostage, the state of law and order in the country where the hostage is
held, the relationship with the respective government and law enforcement
agencies, and the need to deter future similar acts.
2.29
In many cases, the situation in the country where an Australian may be
held captive limits the government’s ability to work toward the victim’s
release. For example, kidnappings often occur in areas experiencing economic
and political turmoil, where law and order is weak, even non-existent,
corruption is endemic and where Australia has little or no diplomatic or
official representation. The avenues for direct intervention may be too
dangerous or attempts to exercise diplomatic influence unproductive. A hostage
situation involving an Australian citizen overseas presents many challenges for
the government. The committee stresses that past responses should in no way be
seen as indicative of that which may occur in the future. Any response will
very much be determined by the circumstances of the day.
2.30
The committee examines the Australian government's response to an
Australian kidnapped and held for ransom overseas in subsequent chapters, but
starts its consideration by providing the particulars and circumstances of
three of the most recent cases of Australians who have been abducted and held
captive overseas—Mr John Martinkus, Mr Douglas Wood and Mr Nigel Brennan.
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