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  1. #1
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    Default Fowler update

    Sadly, still no news on Bob.

    Abducted without a trace

    GEOFFREY YORK
    Globe and Mail Update
    January 24, 2009 at 1:04 AM EST

    Mr. Fowler, 64, was one of Ottawa's most powerful bureaucrats before his retirement. He had served as an ambassador to the United Nations, a deputy minister of defence, a top adviser to a string of prime ministers and a veteran of war zones from Rwanda to Darfur. Yet this time he may have ventured a step too far.

    The tale of the vanished Canadians has all the elements of a Graham Greene thriller: the secretive diplomats who concealed their true mission, their mysterious disappearance in an obscure African country, the intricate games of the rebels and the government and the foreign investigators who are struggling to understand it all.

    But if this is a Graham Greene mystery, it has a 21st-century twist: The Islamic radicals with ties to al-Qaeda who investigators believe may now be holding the diplomats. The radicals have emerged as a growing power in North Africa and now seem to be expanding into countries such as Mali and Niger — a vast new territory for their ambitions.

  2. #2
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    Default Canadian diplomats likely held by al-Qa'ida/AQIM

    Video suggests diplomats in clutches of al-Qaeda

    GEOFFREY YORK
    From Monday's Globe and Mail
    February 9, 2009 at 4:13 AM EST

    JOHANNESBURG — One of the kidnapped Canadians seems exhausted. The other is still clutching his briefcase. Standing behind them are armed men, posing for the camera - the trademark of the al-Qaeda terrorist group.

    This is the latest description of a videotape that apparently shows the disturbing fate of Robert Fowler and Louis Guay, the two Canadian diplomats who were kidnapped in December in the West African nation of Niger.

    ...

    The video adds further evidence to the theory of al-Qaeda involvement in the kidnapping. The leading theory among the investigators - including Canadian, American and United Nations security specialists - is that the two Canadian diplomats are being held by a cell of al-Qaeda's branch in North Africa, which is already suspected of masterminding a series of similar kidnappings of Western tourists in Mali, Algeria and Tunisia.
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


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    Default AQIM states it is holding Fowler, other hostages

    Al-Qaida N. Africa claims 6 hostages

    UPI, Published: Feb. 19, 2009 at 1:03 PM

    NIAMEY, Niger, Feb. 19 (UPI) -- Al-Qaida's North Africa branch claims it is holding hostage a Canadian U.N. peace envoy, his aide and four tourists who were kidnapped in the Sahara.

    A spokesman for al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, an Algerian group that claims to have joined Osama bin Laden's terror network in 2006 but some say has simply adopted the name, threatened "to deal with the six kidnapped according to Islamic Shariah law," an audio recording played on pan-Arab TV station Al-Jazeera said.
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


  4. #4
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    Default Fowler update

    I never did update this thread.

    Bob Fowler was, happily, freed in June. As has subsequently been reported in the press, the JTF2 guys were considering a rescue operation if they had received a more accurate fix on AQIM's whereabouts.

    In his most recent comments to the CBC, Bob has suggested that his itinerary was leaked to AQIM by a source within the government of Niger or the UN.
    Last edited by davidbfpo; 09-09-2009 at 12:14 PM. Reason: leaded changed to leaked
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


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    Default al-Qa'ida operatives free to win release of Canadian

    The secret Mali deal to release two Canadians

    Four al-Qaeda members were freed from prison in exchange for diplomats Robert Fowler and Louis Guay

    Geoffrey York
    Bamako, Mali — From Saturday's Globe and Mail
    Published on Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009 1:45PM EDT
    Last updated on Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009 8:45PM EDT

    Four terrorists, including a bomb-maker, were released from prison in the African nation of Mali in exchange for the freedom this year of Canadian diplomats Robert Fowler and Louis Guay, high-ranking government sources in Mali have confirmed.

    The released prisoners were members of al-Qaeda’s increasingly powerful branch in the Sahara region of northern and western Africa. Two of them had been arrested in the northern Mali desert town of Gao last year after an accidental explosion while they were manufacturing a bomb, the sources say.
    It was widely suspected that there was much more to the release than was initially reported. As you'll see from the full report, the UK government was said to be quite unhappy with Canada's actions in this case (as they were also trying to secure the release of a hostage), as were the Algerians (the primary target of AQIM attacks).
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


  6. #6
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    Default Murky issue partly in the "daylight"

    Rex,

    Thanks for the update and having read the article cited I am sure several governments were disappointed. The decision by Mali was influenced by a desire to keep Canada "sweet". I wonder how they will explain this story, or better just ignore it?

    I'd missed that one prisoner's release sought was Abu Qutada, who is in a UK jail after breaching his immigration bail. Were the kidnappers following a direction from AQ "core" or from a more local AQIM?

    davidbfpo

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    Default and there's more...

    Globe Special Investigation
    The shadowy negotiator who freed Fowler and Guay

    He’s Mali’s go-to man for haggling with terrorists and he brokered the deal that set two Canadians free

    Geoffrey York
    Bamako, Mali — From Monday's Globe and Mail
    Published on Sunday, Oct. 11, 2009 10:22PM EDT
    Last updated on Monday, Oct. 12, 2009 8:25AM EDT

    When the kidnappers freed Robert Fowler and Louis Guay after a gruelling 130 days of captivity this spring, Prime Minister Stephen Harper expressed his gratitude to a long list of people: presidents, diplomats, allies, even the United Nations.

    But he omitted any mention of the most important man of all: the mysterious negotiator from the wilds of the Sahara who brokered the deal that bought the freedom of the Canadian hostages from their al-Qaeda abductors.

    It was a crucial omission, and it revealed the distrust and controversy that still swirls around the shadowy negotiator. Did he walk away with some of the money himself? Is he playing both sides? Is he a little too close to the terrorists with whom he bargains?

    The questions are unanswered. But every insider admits that the negotiator, Baba Ould Sheik, was the essential man for the job. Since his first hostage deal in 2003, he has been the region's go-to man, the wheeler-dealer with the connections and toughness to haggle with heavily armed terrorists in the sand dunes of the Sahara.

    “ I don't regret that I fought for Fowler's liberation, but I'm not happy with Canada. ”
    — Baba Ould Sheik

    Until now, he has never spoken publicly of his pivotal role in freeing Mr. Fowler and Mr. Guay. He is a man who has always preferred the shadows. But now, in an interview with The Globe and Mail, he describes how he brokered the deal, how he communicated with to the terrorists, how he shared his carpet in the desert with Mr. Fowler, and how he drove through a sandstorm to get the Canadians back to safety.

    He also says that he was never thanked by Canada for his three months of work to free the Canadians, and was never compensated for his substantial expenses. Yet he acknowledges that even his own colleagues assume that he was paid – and are accusing him of failing to share the money.

    ...
    They mostly come at night. Mostly.


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