MANILA, Feb. 26 -- The Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Thursday they are worried about the health condition of their aid workers held hostage by kidnappers in the restive southern Philippines. Swiss Andreas Notter, Italian Eugenio Vagni and Filipino Mary Jean Lacaba were seized by gunmen on Jan. 15 after they inspected a water and sanitation project at the provincial jail in Patikul, Sulu Province. Abu Sayyaf, a rebel group notorious for a series of kidnappings, have claimed that they were holding captive the three Red Cross workers. "The three of them made contact with the ICRC and their families a week ago. Since then, we have not had any direct contact with them," said Alain Aeschlimann, ICRC's head of operations for East Asia, South-East Asia and the Pacific. Local media reported that two of the ICRC members, Vagni and Lacaba, have some health problems weeks after they were kidnapped. "It's hard to confirm what is being reported by the media, but we are concerned about their health and about the fatigue and stress they are suffering," Aeschlimann said in a statement. "It is very difficult to know precisely where they are. There is a lot of speculation about that. All we can say at this stage is that we know they have been on the move over recent days and that they have had to walk in very difficult conditions, through the jungle and often in the rain. All of this has apparently weakened them," he added. The ICRC Official, who recently visited the family of Lacaba in the southern City of Davao, appealed to the abductors' sense of humanity as he reiterated their call for the swift and unconditional release of their colleagues. "Meeting the families was very moving for me. They are suffering horribly and my heart goes out to them. Having a child myself, I was particularly touched to see the children of our colleagues asking about their abducted parents. One child is my son's age and can hardly sleep," said Aeschlimann. "My colleagues and I did our best to comfort the families, and we're doing everything we can to give them the support they need. We hope that this crisis will be over soon and that Mary Jean, Andreas and Eugenio will be able to return home safe and sound," he added. Aside from the three ICRC workers, Abu Sayyaf is also holding Umar Jaleel, a Sri Lankan national in Basilan Island. The Abu Sayyaf is a rebel group with more than 300 members blamed for a series of kidnappings and terror attacks in the Southeast Asian country, including the bombing of a ferry near Manila Bay in 2004 that killed more than 100 people. |
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