British special forces release Kember and two Canadians.

Blackleaf

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Times Online March 23, 2006



Norman Kember's harrowed appearance on this January video was a low point for his family and supporters (Al Jazeera/AP)





Special forces free Iraq hostages, including Briton
By Philippe Naughton





British and US special forces freed three Western peace workers - including the 74-year-old Briton Norman Kember - without firing a shot today, ending a four-month ordeal in which an American hostage was murdered.

The three Christian activists were freed in an SAS-led raid on a house in western Baghdad early this morning. It appears that their captors had already fled.

Mr Kember, a retired professor, is in good health and was said to have told staff at the British Embassy in Baghdad: "It's great to be free. I'm looking forward to getting back to the UK."

A life-long peace campaigner, Mr Kember was kidnapped with Canadians James Loney, 41, and Harmeet Singh Sooden, 32, and Tom Fox, a 54-year-old American, in Baghdad on November 26. All four were volunteers with the Chicago-based Christian Peacemaker Teams.

While friends and family held vigils, furious diplomatic attempts to win their freedom came to nothing. Videos released periodically by their captors were followed by ominous silences. On March 9, shortly after the release of a videotape showing his three colleagues, Mr Fox's battered body was found handcuffed on a rubbish dump in west Baghdad.

British officials said the rescue operation came after weeks of planning. A US military spokesman, Major-General Rick Lynch, said the information that allowed the assault to go ahead came from one of two men detained by American forces late last night.

This morning at 8am (0500GMT) the raid was launched and all three hostages were found tied up in the same room of the house. Operations continue to track down the kidnappers.

"They were bound, they were together. There were no kidnappers in the areas," Major-General Lynch told a press conference in Baghdad. "The key point is that it was intelligence-led and it was information gathered from a detainee."

All three hostages were said to be in good health. The hostages were flown to Baghdad's Green Zone for medical checks and debriefing by the security services. Mr Kember is expected to fly home tomorrow night.

Reports of their release were confirmed by Jack Straw, the Foreign Secretary, who delivered a statement in Downing Street this morning.

"The three hostages, Norman Kember, a British hostage and two Canadian hostages, have been released as a result of a multi-national force operation which took place earlier today. British forces were involved in this operation," Mr Straw said.

"It follows weeks and weeks of very careful work by our military personnel in Iraq and many civilians as well. I am delighted that now we have a happy ending to this terrible ordeal for Norman Kember, for his family, and for the Canadian hostages and their families as well."

The Foreign Secretary said that he had already spoken to Mr Kember's wife, Pat. "It goes without saying that she is absolutely delighted, elated, at this news," he added.

In Toronto, Doug Pritchard, co-director of the Christian Peacemaker Teams, which sends teams of Christians to conflict zones around the world, welcomed the release - although he said that Mr Fox's murder meant that their colleagues' joy was "bitter-sweet".

The Iraqi Interior Minstry said that the three had been rescued from a house in the town of Mishahda, 20 miles north of Baghdad, but it appeared that the house was actually in Baghdad's western outskirts.

Mr Kember, a retired professor of medical physics, is a former secretary of the Baptist Peace Fellowship and a trustee of the Fellowship for Reconciliation, a Christian peace organisation.



He told Premier Christian Radio before he left that his visit to Iraq was a "gesture of solidarity". He said: "I hope to meet ordinary Iraqis of various backgrounds, Shias, Sunnis, Christians and just hear their stories, then come back and talk about it."

Asked by the station if going to Iraq was a brave action, he answered: "I don’t know, I’ve done a lot of writing and talking about peacemaking. I’ve demonstrated, you name it I’ve been on it, but I feel that’s what I’d call cheap peacemaking."

The abduction of the four Christian activists was claimed by a previously unknown group calling itself the Brigades of the Swords of Righteousness which threatened to kill them unless all Iraqi prisoners were released.

British Muslim groups lent their weight to attempts to negotiate the hostages' release, although it is unclear what contact, if any, was made with their kidnappers.

Mr Kember's wife also released a televised message appealing for his release via the al-Jazeera television network, and further appeals for mercy were made by Moazzam Begg, the former British detainee in Guantanamo Bay, and by Abu Qatada, a terror suspect held at Full Sutton jail near York.

The release comes two weeks after the broadcast of a video showing Professor Kember and his fellow captives. Security experts who analysed the 25-second clip said they were encouraged by the absence of terrorist paraphernalia such as guns, flags and orange jumpsuits, and by the lack of a new deadline. They thought that the three had escaped the clutches of Abu Musab al- Zarqawi, the al-Qaeda terrorist leader thought to have personally executed Ken Bigley, a British engineer, and other Western hostages.

After today's rescue, David Hill, a former deputy chief constable of Gwent Police who is now a security and counter-terrorism expert, said that UK and US forces in Iraq would have been gathering intelligence and gradually closing in on the kidnapping cell since the hostages were abudcted four months ago.

"It's remarkable how Mr Kember has survived because he would have been treated harshly but he and the others have obviously conducted themselves as we would advise them to do," Mr Hill told Times Online.

"He will have been calm and compliant - we advise hostages never to provoke their captors - and entered into a dialogue with his kidnappers. His life experience and the fact that he was there trying to help the Iraqi people would have helped him."

The veteran peace campaigner Bruce Kent, a friend of Mr Kember who has been involved in weekly vigils for his release since his capture, said "this is news beyond belief".

He told Sky News: "In this awful mess of Baghdad thank God there is one bright light anyway." Speaking about his friend’s ordeal, he added: "It was absolute torture. And thinking of the unfortunate American Tom Fox who was murdered, they must have had the most terrible time."

The most high-profile Western hostage still missing in Iraq is Jill Carroll, a freelance journalist working for The Christian Science Monitor, who was kidnapped in Baghdad on January 7. She has appeared in three videotapes delivered by her kidnappers to Arab satellite television stations.

thetimesonline.co.uk
 

Mogz

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Jan 26, 2006
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Some FYI for members:

This morning on both the Defence Information Network (DIN) and CBC.ca it was confirmed that a multinational taskforce from The United States, Canada, Britain, and Iraq stormed the location where the hostages were being held and freed them without firing a shot. This is significant because this is the first KNOWN instance of Canadian Special Operations Assaulters from JTF-2 operating in Iraq.