26 November 2009 - 06H56  

Canadian, Australian journalists in Somalia freed
A Somali militiaman oversees food aid distributed by the United Nations World Food Program near the town of Jowhar in the lower Shabele region of Somalia. Two freelance journalists, one from Canada and the other from Australia, have been freed after 15 months in captivity in the anarchi African nation, with the Canadian alleging she was tortured.
A Somali militiaman oversees food aid distributed by the United Nations World Food Program near the town of Jowhar in the lower Shabele region of Somalia. Two freelance journalists, one from Canada and the other from Australia, have been freed after 15 months in captivity in the anarchi African nation, with the Canadian alleging she was tortured.
A photo released by the Brennan family in 2008 shows Australian freelance photographer Nigel Brennan. Two independent journalists, including Brennan, have been freed after 15 months in captivity in Somalia, one of their kidnappers told AFP.
A photo released by the Brennan family in 2008 shows Australian freelance photographer Nigel Brennan. Two independent journalists, including Brennan, have been freed after 15 months in captivity in Somalia, one of their kidnappers told AFP.

AFP - Two freelance journalists, one from Canada and the other from Australia, were freed on Wednesday after 15 months in captivity in Somalia, with the Canadian alleging she was tortured.

One of their kidnappers, who refused to identify himself, told AFP a ransom of one million dollars (665,000 euros) had been paid for the release of Canadian journalist Amanda Lindhout and Australian photojournalist Nigel Brennan.

Lindhout and Brennan were in a hotel in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Wednesday evening, pending their departure from Somalia on Thursday.

A hotel employee said the pair were "very tired" following their ordeal -- one of the longest-running of many kidnappings in the lawless Horn of Africa country.

Lindhout told Canadian broadcaster CTV that she was beaten and tortured by her captors, who she called criminals pretending to be freedom fighters, and acknowledged that the two families paid a one-million dollar ransom for their freedom.

Lindhout said she spent her captivity "sitting in a corner on the floor 24 hours a day for the last 15 months. There were times that I was beaten, that I was tortured."

"It was extremely oppressive," she added. "I was kept by myself at all times. I had no one to speak to. I was normally kept in a room with a light, no window, I had nothing to write on or with. There was very little food."

The kidnappers told her that they beat her, she said, because the money "wasn't coming quickly enough."

The Australian family of Brennan spoke of their "overwhelming" joy after his release.

An emotional Kellie Brennan, the photojournalist's sister-in-law, fought back tears as she recounted the family's harrowing emotional journey since his capture in August 2008. Related article: Australian family's joy as kidnap victim released

"It's very hard to express the overwhelming sense of joy that we have today that we feel as a family at the news of Nigel and Amanda's release," Kellie Brennan told reporters.

"I want to make it really clear to you all that they are still in Somalia and they are not out of danger yet."

Lindhout and Brennan were captured on August 23, 2008, en route from Mogadishu to visit a refugee camp in Afgooye, just outside the capital.

A Somali journalist and two drivers were also taken hostage but freed after 177 days. They were unable to identify their captors or the motives for the kidnappings.

In September 2008, a local tribal chief participated in negotiations to try to free the pair and said the kidnappers wanted 2.5 million dollars. In January, he said the demand had been reduced to 100,000 dollars.

According to Somali media, the two journalists had escaped in February and found refuge at a mosque before being recaptured.

In May, the pair provided proof that they were still alive by calling media outlets, including AFP.

While some observers regularly accused Ottawa of inaction on the file, others say the two journalists had been naive in underestimating the dangers in the region.

The Canadian weekly newsmagazine MacLean's said Lindhout had had no formal training as a reporter when she traveled to Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq to find work as a war correspondent.

She worked for Press TV in Baghdad, where she was once briefly detained in the violent Sadr City neighborhood -- an incident that left her with a scar.

On the eve of her abduction, she wrote in an email to a friend: "I'm in Somalia trying to get a story ... It's really dangerous. It looks like it's just warlords and insurgents and a lawless country."

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