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South African hostage in Syria alive after one year

South African hostage in Syria alive after one year
A member of the Syria government forces guards a position as they battle opposition fighters in the rebel-held town of Harasta, in the Eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of Damascus, on Monday. (AFP)
Updated 10 January 2018

South African hostage in Syria alive after one year

South African hostage in Syria alive after one year

JOHANNESBURG: A South African charity said Tuesday it had received proof that a freelance photographer kidnapped in Syria was alive, as his family prepared to mark one year since his capture.
Shiraaz Mahomed was kidnapped on Jan. 10 last year traveling to the Turkish border from a hospital supported by the Gift of the Givers charity in the Syrian town of Darkouch, 100 km west of Aleppo.
Gift of the Givers said that no ransom demand had been made and the identity of the kidnappers was not known.
The charity said in a statement that it had confirmed Mahomed was alive through replies to 10 questions that only he would be able to answer.
Mahomed sent a message sending greetings to his parents and saying that he was “very happy with the questions and wants to be released,” the charity said, describing his family as “ecstatic.”
Many foreign journalists have been kidnapped since the start of the Syrian conflict in 2011, often by the self-described Daesh group.
South African hostage Stephen McGown, who was held by Al-Qaeda in Mali for nearly six years, was released in August after negotiations led by Gift of the Givers.
The South African government insisted that no ransom was paid to secure McGown’s release.