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Al Qaeda Is Hiding an American Hostage

July 21, 2017 by www.thedailybeast.com Leave a Comment

CALABAR, Nigeria—When Sweden ’s foreign minister, Margot Wallström, announced late last month that Johan Gustafsson—who was kidnapped by al Qaeda militants in Mali in 2011— had been released and reunited with his family , rumors went round the West African nation that more foreign hostages would be freed in the coming days.

But that didn’t happen.

Instead, the jihadis holding more than half a dozen Westerners put them in front of cameras and, in effect, on the market, pushing their respective countries to negotiate their release.

The al Qaeda affiliated group known as Nusrat al Islam wal Muslimeen—an organization formed by the merger of terrorist groups in the Sahel and West Africa with the Saharan branch of al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)— issued a video showing Stephen McGowan of South Africa, Elliot Kenneth Arthur of Australia, Iulian Ghergut of Romania, Beatrice Stockly of Switzerland, Gloria Cecilia Narvaez of Colombia, and Sophie Petronin of France.

These hostages were kidnapped when the several groups were operating separately. Now, the merger in March has brought all the victims under the same terrorist umbrella.

In many cases, we have seen these poor prisoners before. The jihadi groups in the Sahel have often released proof-of-life videos of their Western victims.

But there is one glaring exception.

In October it will be a year since Jeffery Woodke, 56, an American humanitarian worker, was kidnapped from his home in Abalak, Niger, by armed men who killed two guards before driving him across the desert into neighboring Mali. Since the abduction, nothing has yet been said about him by the jihadis.

Woodke, who is from McKinleyville, California, is a longtime aid worker with the Youth With a Mission charity and has been living in Niger since 1992, helping local tribes overcome drought and food shortages. On the website of The Redwood Coast School of Missions , a Christian mission based in the town of Arcata in California, he is listed as an instructor.

The FBI kidnapping notice shows a stocky man with a gray goatee and a winning smile. In Abalak, he spoke the local language, wore a turban and traditional dress, and was very well-liked. The town’s mayor reportedly said after the kidnapping it was “such a devastating shock the whole city cried.”

A U.S. State Department official speaking on background told The Daily Beast the case is being followed closely and there is “enough information to know that he is alive,” but would say nothing more specific than that.

Woodke’s abduction was the first time an American citizen has been kidnapped in Niger, but it isn’t the jihadis’ first try in that highly restive country.

In 2009, Islamist militants from AQIM attempted to abduct U.S. embassy personnel from a hotel in the town of Tahoua about 232 miles north of the country’s capital, Niamey. The plot failed.

Malian investigators have since tracked the kidnappers of Woodke and believe the American missionary is being held by the Movement for Oneness and Jihad in West Africa (MOJWA), another faction linked to al Qaeda.

Tahoua Region, where Abalak is located, is an area where “MOJWA militants have been very active for years,” said Christian Anozie, editor of Event Diary magazine, a West African news publication that operates from Lagos in Nigeria. “Woodke could probably have been driven by land to the deserts of northern Mali, which is where most hostages are taken.”

While we may not be exactly sure about al Qaeda’s silence over Woodke, we can easily guess that the terror group is buying time to understand what to do with the missionary. It probably would have learned from the cases of Luke Somers in Yemen in 2014 and Warren Wenstein on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in early 2015, where the Obama administration ignored calls for a ransom payment and tried instead to free them using U.S. military forces—with fatal results for both hostages.

Perhaps the group wants to see if President Donald Trump maintains the same policy, which has been questioned bitterly by many families of those who’ve been taken hostage in the past.

Apart from Woodke, who is believed to still be in Mali, five other Americans are being held by the Taliban Haqqani group in Afghanistan. The missionary’s case is particularly worrisome, however, because of the silence.

“Al Qaeda doesn’t always like to rush in negotiating the release of its hostages,” said Anozie, who has followed events in Mali since violence began in the north of the country in 2012. “They consider a lot of things, like the current financial situation and the political climate.”

Kidnapping Americans isn’t always good business for jihadis, because of the strict U.S. policy against paying ransoms or making other kinds of concessions. The terror organization by now should know that even American organizations that Woodke has ties with will be reluctant to raise money to free him for fear of prosecution.

But the U.S., too, should know that things don’t often end well when an American is held by jihadi groups, as we’ve seen in many cases in the past, including those of Somers and Wenstein.

According to a report by New America released in January, “To Pay Ransom or Not to Pay Ransom,” co-authored by Peter Bergen, American hostages are more than twice as likely to die in captivity, remain captive, or be murdered by their captors as hostages from other Western nations.

Hostages from countries such as Austria, France, Germany, Spain, and Switzerland, that have a record for paying ransoms, are far more likely to be freed, even when they are held by the terrorist groups that are most likely to kill those they kidnap.

The U.K., with a no-ransom policy similar to the U.S., is the other country whose abducted citizens have been freed at rates much lower than other Western nations. Out of 10 European hostages held by jihadi terror groups, eight were freed, compared to a quarter for the U.S. and nearly a third for the U.K.

Most of the murdered Western hostages are American or British. Of the 90 Western hostages murdered by their captors between 2001 and 2016, close to half were American and one sixth were British.

Taking a closer look, 15 Americans were taken hostage by the so-called Islamic State and groups it has links with. Of that number, 13 were murdered, one died in captivity, and one was released.

All four Americans ISIS abducted in Syria lost their lives in captivity. Three of them—James Foley, Steven Sotloff, and Peter Kassig—were murdered. The other, Kayla Mueller, died in captivity.

By contrast, 14 out of the 16 continental European hostages held by ISIS in Syria were released by the jihadis.

In June of 2015, the Obama administration issued Presidential Policy Directive 30 concerning ” hostage recovery activities .” It created the new post of “special presidential envoy for hostage affairs,” and the Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell (HRFC) to coordinate among the many concerned agencies. It also emphasized the need to work closely with families, not antagonistically, as had happened in the past.

Some 18 months later, according to the New America report, the fusion cell reported it had overseen the release of about 100 hostages, but provided no details. We know from press reports of two who were held by Houthi rebels in Yemen, and one, Kevin Patrick Dawes, released by the Syrian government. Another American believed in Syrian custody, journalist and former Marine Austin Tice, remains unaccounted for.

There is no record of the fusion cell freeing hostages held by jihadists. And the core of the policy remains as it was: “The United States will use every appropriate resource to gain the safe return of U.S. nationals who are held hostage. But the United States Government will make no concessions to individuals or groups holding U.S. nationals hostage,” the Obama directive declares.

Will the Trump administration try to apply the president’s “art of the deal” to hostage cases? Thus far, there is no change in policy.

If the militants holding Woodke are aware of these facts, and presumably they are, they will take their time working on their own strategies, and we may have to wait more months—or years—to learn what becomes of the American missionary whose abduction brought his adopted hometown in Niger to tears.

With additional reporting by Christopher Dickey

Filed Under: World Al-Qaeda, Hostage, Niger, world, al qaeda hostages yemen, hostages al qaeda, al qaeda killing hostage video, al qaeda hostages, al qaeda hostage

Ann Summers founder Jacqueline Gold’s bravery amid tragic life – double cancer to IVF baby loss

March 17, 2023 by www.mirror.co.uk Leave a Comment

Ann Summers boss Jacqueline Gold has died at the age of 62, her heartbroken family have announced.

The lingerie brand mogul Jacqueline was just 62 when she passed away. In her lifetime she faced a string of heartaches and tragedies – but also went on the achieve great things.

She turned lingerie brand Ann Summers into the female and sex positive brand that it is known as today, acquired Knickerbox and rose to prominence for her business know-how. She was even awarded a CBE in 2016.

The business side of her life flourished and she even made the Sunday Times Rich List in 2019, but her personal life saw a number of tragedies.

Speaking on the Diary of the CEO podcast in 2021, Jacqueline said at the time: “Anybody that’s listening will not know the crusade I’ve been on.”

Childhood sexual abuse

In the Diary of a CEO podcast, Jacqueline spoke of her “challenging” and “unconventional” childhood.

Jacqueline was sexually abused by her mother’s former lover between the ages of 12 and 15.

Jacqueline Gold had an incredibly successful career (

Image:

Getty Images)

The Ann Summers boss faced a series of tragedies in her life (

Image:

Dave Benett/Getty Images)

Speaking about the ordeal to RadioTimes.com in 2016, she said: “I’ve always been a survivor, and what happened to me I saw as cruelty, not sex. It was a matter of control, somebody else’s control over me.

“I wasn’t going to be a victim. It made me want to take control myself, to be successful. All through my life, I’ve been determined not to allow what’s happened to me to shape my future.”

Jacqueline also claimed she believed her mother ignored the abuse. She told the Diary of a CEO podcast: “We weren’t allowed to go to sleepovers or parties or anything like that.

“But then when it came to this abuse, which I believe she knew about, we were left in the most vulnerable situations. She was quite a complicated woman and we were in a pretty tough situation.”

Jacqueline added how finding financial independence was her “escape”.

Jacqueline was very open about her past traumas (

Image:

Dave Benett/Getty Images)

The business woman’s mother Beryl Hunt died in 2003 after a battle with dementia.

She told the Guardian in 2007: “My mother had dementia, she got it very young, probably when she was 63, probably brought on by alcohol. I never met anyone like her.

“The best way I can describe her is that she was almost scared of life.

“I remember when she was in her early sixties, I used to go round there twice a week, and she always had this innocent look. She’d be smiling, pleased to see me, and I put my arms around her and she’d stand there limp, arms by her side, as if she didn’t know how to return love.”

Breast cancer battle

In 2016, Jacqueline was diagnosed with breast cancer. And didn’t speak about her diagnosis until a year later.

Speaking of the secret battle for the first time in an interview with Hello! magazine in 2017, Jacqueline continued to look on the bright side.

She said: “In a perverse way, I feel that having cancer has given me an opportunity and whilst I would in no way want it again, it has changed my life for the better.”

However, Jacqueline honestly said the journey had been “brutal”.

The Ann Summers founder was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2016 (

Image:

Bloomberg via Getty Images)

She told Steven Bartlett on his podcast: “It was a brutal journey, there was no doubt about that. But I remember saying things to myself like: ‘When I have my next scan, the cancer is gonna be gone’.

“And when I had my next scan in the January it had gone, or it wasn’t on the scan. I then had an operation in the July – a lumpectomy – and I was told I was all clear and there was a 0.1% chance it would come back because I’d had such good response to treatment.

“Unfortunately, I was in that 0.1% and it did return a couple of years later and I had a mastectomy and when I spoke to the consultant he said: ‘It’s not curable but it is treatable’ because it’s now gone from stage two to stage 4 which was devastating to hear.

“I immediately said to him: ‘Well what are the chances of it being cured? I know you’re saying it’s not curable but we’ve all heard of people…’

“‘Oh yes that that’s 0.1%’ and my attitude is: ‘Well if anyone’s gonna be that 0.1% it’s gonna be me’ because I have to think like that, that’s what helps drive me forward. If I can be that 0.1% where it went wrong I can be that 0.1% where it goes brilliant.”

Jacqueline previously discussed the toll the chemotherapy took on her, telling OK! magazine in March 2020: “Anyone who has been through it knows how tough it is on your body.

“I lost my hair, which was really upsetting. It was actually the thing that made me cry the first time. That first clump of hair coming out really chokes you up.

“Women associate so much of their identity with their hair. But I knew it would grow back.

“But chemotherapy also made me lose my sight. My vision was very blurred and things like crossing the road became a huge challenge. Thankfully, it’s come back now, but for most of the year it was blurry.”

Baby son’s death at eight months old

Jacqueline and her husband Dan Cunningham, who was 17 years her junior, met in 2002.

The pair had wanted to start a family and had tried for nine months before they decided to undergo IVF.

She went through two failed IVF attempts before they split in 2006.

She candidly discussed the death of her son on Loose Women (

Image:

ITV)

But, the couple reconciled and underwent fertility treatment in the US and Jacqueline became pregnant with twins. Her pregnancy was filled with heartache as she was 12 weeks into her pregnancy that only one twin would survive.

Jacqueline’s son Alfie had Alobar holoprosencephaly, which prevents the brain developing normally during pregnancy.

She previously told Loose Women: “At my 12 week scan I found out that he had a fatal condition. I was told he would pass naturally during the pregnancy.”

However, Jacqueline’s pregnancy continued and Alfie was born and lived for eight months. Recalling her heartache over hearing her son cry in pain, she told Loose Women: “It was immensely traumatic, because of his condition he was born in pain. No parent should have to go through that.

“We try to keep his memory alive – we talk about him all the time, we’ve got pictures of him everywhere.”

Jacqueline and Dan raised their daughter Scarlet. She previously told the Daily Mail of raising her daughter: “The most natural thing for a mother is the need to make everything right for her baby. I can do that for Scarlett but I can’t for Alfie.”

Attempted poisoning

Jacqueline employed a nanny before her son’s death as she needed “all the help she could get”.

The lingerie brand mogul employed Allison Cox, whom she said she “trusted implicitly” to help raise her daughter.

Jacqueline recalled how she had another woman who would “do odd jobs” and help her with things such as prepare meals – but Jacqueline was unaware Allison didn’t get on with the other woman she employed.

Allison Cox was jailed for attempting to poison Jacqueline

“The nanny, instead of coming to me and being like: ‘Look I’ve got a problem here, can we talk about it’ she thought the best tactic we be to get the cook the sack. So she thought: ‘I know I’ll start off by putting copious amounts of sugar in the food after she’s prepared it.

“So I came home from work and I sat there and I cooked dinner, everything seemed fine and we had fish and when we sat there to eat the fish the sauce tasted like custard.”

Jacqueline said she dismissed the first incident but a few weeks later “the same thing happened again – this time it was salt”.

“And I thought, there’s something wrong here,” she explained. “And I obviously needed to talk to the lady who was doing the food so that’s what I had arranged to do.”

However, before she spoke to the cook, she asked her nanny to bring her lunch into work one day after she left it at home. On the way to dropping Jacqueline’s lunch off, the nanny “poured screen wash” into Jacqueline’s soup.

Jacqueline recalled: “I came to eat it at lunchtime luckily, I took quite a large mouthful and the reason I say that is because I don’t think I would’ve tasted it otherwise. And I spat it out because immediately it tasted of chemical – of course, screen wash can kill you.”

She added how her “instinct” told her the nanny was responsible.

Allison Cox was later jailed after she leaded guilty to unlawfully administering poison in 2010.

Allison later apologised to the lingerie boss as she said: “It was a ­terrible thing to do. But I am not a poisoner – I never meant to hurt anyone, and I want ­Jacqueline to know how truly sorry I am.”

Father’s death

Weeks before her own tragic death, Jacqueline’s father David Gold died.

The joint chairman of West Ham United died aged 86, with Jacqueline and her sister Vanessa by his side.

David Gold died in January this year (

Image:

Chris Joseph/Capital Pictures)

Jacqueline was by her father’s side (

Image:

Bloomberg via Getty Images)

West Ham confirmed the news in January this year as his fellow chairman David Sullivan said: “On behalf of everyone at the football club, it is with profound sorrow and a heavy heart that we mourn the passing of our colleague and friend, David Gold.

“Of all our joint ventures, none gave us more pride and happiness than the day we took ownership of West Ham United, our club, in January 2010.

“David had a long-standing connection with the Hammers, having grown up opposite the Boleyn Ground in Green Street, and represented the club at junior level. He always wanted what was best for West Ham United, and his passing is a great loss for all of us.”

If you’ve been the victim of sexual assault, you can access help and resources via www.rapecrisis.org.uk or calling the national telephone helpline on 0808 802 9999

If you have been affected by this story, advice and support can be found at the Miscarriage Association. You can call them on 01924 200799 or email [email protected]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Ann Summers, Breast cancer, Cancer, Celebrity News, ivf babies health, ivf babies smarter, ivf baby due date, jacqueline gold, tragic life quotes, amid amish life cross stitch pattern, founders solid gold, tragic life stories, ivf hair loss, ivf weight loss

Galvez hopes US would consider more Edca projects

March 20, 2023 by globalnation.inquirer.net Leave a Comment

Defense chief Carlito Galvez Jr. said here Monday that he hopes the United States would consider more Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (Edca) projects as the agreement goes full swing.

FILE PHOTO: Defense SecretaryCarlito Galvez Jr. INQUIRER FILES

PAMPANGA, Philippines — Defense chief Carlito Galvez Jr. said here Monday that he hopes the United States would consider more Enhanced Defense Cooperation Agreement (Edca) projects as the agreement goes full swing.

“We hope that the United States of America would consider more Edca projects,” Galvez said during his speech in Basa Air Base in Floridablanca town, where a groundbreaking ceremony of runway rehabilitation occurred as part of the Edca project.

Galvez made the call as he noted that the US provided more than $83 million or P4.56 billion for Edca sites as of March 2023.

Also, 23 percent of the 21 bilaterally approved projects have already been completed, according to the official.

It can be recalled that the Philippines have agreed to four new additional Edca sites in the country.

Military officials have already previously identified Zambales, Cagayan, Isabela, and Palawan as possible sites. The sites are notable since it faces Taiwan (Zambales, Cagayan, and Isabela) and the South China Sea (Palawan).

Currently, there are five pre-determined Edca sites located at Antonio Bautista Air Base in Palawan, which is closest to the Kalayaan Group of Islands; Basa Air Base in Pampanga, the home of the Philippine Air Force’s fighter planes; and Fort Magsaysay in Nueva Ecija, the country’s largest military camp and a frequent location of Philippine-US military exercises.

The other two areas are Mactan-Benito Ebuen Air Base in Cebu and Lumbia Air Base in Cagayan de Oro City.

“After almost eight years of delays and legal challenges, the Edca implementation is now in full swing,” Galvez also said.

In 2016, the Supreme Court upheld the legality of the Edca between two countries as the high court pointed to the remains consistent with existing laws.

READ: Supreme Court upholds legality of Edca

Edca, however, remains controversial as some local executives and lawmakers expressed their misgivings with the agreement.

The Edca was signed by two countries in 2014. Galvez also said Edca is part of the country’s Mutual Defense Treaty.

Signed by two parties on August 30, 1951, the MDT states that both countries would support each other if an external party attacks either the Philippines or the United States.

READ: Galvez says Edca is just for deterrence, not preparation for war

JPV
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LOOK: The women who were linked with James Reid

March 20, 2023 by entertainment.inquirer.net Leave a Comment

(From left) Nadine Lustre, James Reid, Issa Pressman. Image: Instagram/@nadine, Instagram/@james, Instagram/@pressmanissa

(From left) Nadine Lustre, James Reid, Issa Pressman. Image: Instagram/@nadine, Instagram/@james, Instagram/@pressmanissa

After his seeming confirmation of his relationship with British-Filipino model Issa Pressman, James Reid is once again the topic of discussion in local showbiz scene, and his love life and previous flames suddenly became of interest to many.

While he refused to elaborate on his rumored romance with Pressman, the the “u&i” singer said on Friday, March 17 that he’s the “happiest [he had ever been].” Let’s take a look at some of the female celebrities who at one point had been linked with the actor-slash-musician-slash-talent management executive.

Nadine Lustre

Nadine Lustre

Nadine Lustre. Image: Instagram/@nadine

Nadine Lustre certainly need no introduction, being the famous half of the “JaDine” love team for four years. The actress, who gained widespread recognition as a multi-hyphenate in the entertainment industry, was confirmed to be Reid’s girlfriend in February 2016 until their separation was publicized in January 2020.

She, however, revealed in an interview with broadcast journalist Karen Davila that they have broken up since November 2019, where she noted that there was no third party involved and that their split was a “mutual decision.”

The ex-couple started as co-stars in Reid’s music video for the song “Alam Niya Ba” which was released in August 2013. They would eventually work together as a loveteam in the films “Diary ng Panget,” “Talk Back and You’re Dead,” “This Time,” “Para sa Hopeless Romantic,” and “Never Not Love You,” as well as the teleseryes “On The Wings of Love” and “Till I Met You.”

Reid also revealed that he lived together with the singer-actress during a conversation with comedian-host Vice Ganda, in an episode of the now-defunct talk show “Gandang Gabi Vice” in March 2019. The musician would eventually sell their Quezon City mansion a month after their breakup was confirmed.

Issa Pressman

Issa Pressman. Image from Instagram / @pressmanissa

Issa Pressman. Image from Instagram / @pressmanissa

Reid and Issa Pressman go way back when the latter was alleged to be the third party and the reason behind the musician’s breakup with Nadine Lustre in 2020. The allegations were dismissed by Lustre, Reid, Presman, and even her older sister Yassi at that time, although netizens brought up the issue once again after their “coming out” posts on Instagram.

Pressman, who started her showbiz career as a contestant of Eat Bulaga’s “Little Miss Philippines” segment in 2004, is known to be a talent of Reid’s label, Careless.

Nancy McDonie

Nancy McDonie of Momoland. Image from Instagram /@nancyjewel_mcdonie_

Nancy McDonie of Momoland. Image from Instagram /@nancyjewel_mcdonie_

Dating rumors swirled between Reid and Nancy McDonie, a member of the K-pop girl group Momoland which disbanded in February 2023, when they were spotted together on multiple occasions, notably in Los Angeles, U.S. Neither the rumored flames issued a statement about their rumored relationship, as of this writing.

It can be recalled that Reid and McDonie were supposed to work together in the Antoinette Jadaone-helmed series “The Soulmate Project,” although the former revealed that he will no longer do the project in February 2021.

Julia Barretto

Julia Barretto

Julia Barretto

Julia Barretto, who’s currently in a happy relationship with Gerald Anderson, was also linked with Reid after they were allegedly spotted having coffee together in July 2015, and were rumored to be dined together at a restaurant. The musician quashed his involvement with the actress on both accounts.

Reid also admitted that he doesn’t see himself working with Barretto in an interview with Boy Abunda in October 2019, as he hinted at their apparent rumors.

“Do I have to explain? Games over,” he said, to which Abunda noted with, “Para walang gulo (So there’s no conflict).”

“Yeah. Let’s make life easy,” Reid said.

Ericka Villongco

Ericka Villongco. Image from Instagram / @erickaxx

Ericka Villongco. Image from Instagram / @erickaxx

Ericka Villongco, known as one-half of the acoustic duo Krissy & Ericka, was in a three-year relationship with Reid before their breakup was confirmed in March 2014.

The singer is currently based in the U.S., and notably made headlines in January 2020 after apologizing for a “bad joke” she made on Instagram at the time when Reid and Lustre confirmed their separation.

Liza Soberano

Liza Soberano. Image: Instagram/@lizasoberano

Liza Soberano. Image: Instagram/@lizasoberano

Liza Soberano, who’s currently dating Kapamilya actor Enrique Gil, was also linked with Reid as they were spotted touring South Korea and the U.S. for business.

Soberano immediately quashed the rumors in a vlog with Bea Alonzo earlier this month, where she said, “Me and James, no, we never had a thing.”

The actress is currently an artist of Careless, where she signed as an exclusive talent in June 2022.

Devon Seron

Devon Seron. Image from Instagram / @devonseron

Devon Seron. Image from Instagram / @devonseron

Devon Seron became involved with Reid after becoming housemates in “Pinoy Big Brother: Teen Clash 2010,” where the musician eventually emerged as the season’s Grand Winner.

The two would work together as a loveteam after their time at the PBB house, and Seron eventually admitted that they had a “mutual understanding” or MU in September 2017 when they were teenagers. EDV

RELATED STORIES:

James Reid speaks up amid resurfaced ‘rumors’ on Issa Pressman: They are just that, rumors

Have James Reid and Issa Pressman gone Instagram official?

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