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Central Alberta's Amanda Lindhout, a freelancer for the Red Deer Advocate, was reportedly kidnapped Saturday in Somalia, along with another foreign journalist. Her uncle, John Lindhout Sr., confirmed Saturday his niece was the missing Canadian journalist.


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$2.5-million ransom demanded for journalists

Kidnappers of Australian, Canadian and Somali journalists in Somalia are demanding a 2.5 million dollar ransom, a traditional chief in contact with the abductors said Sunday.

“The kidnappers demanded 2.5 million dollars and we are trying to secure their release,” said Dahir Farah, who has been participating in negotiations to free the three journalists abducted in Somalia last month.

Another person claiming to be an intermediary for the kidnappers who spoke of the same ransom demand. He also allowed two people claiming to be the foreign journalists to speak briefly.

“I'm Amanda, the Canadian journalist. Our health situation is very well for the time being,” Amanda Lindhout, a freelance foreign correspondent from Central Alberta, purportedly said.

Between March and when she was kidnapped, Lindhout had filed weekly columns to the Advocate — mostly concerning Iraq.

A man claiming to be Nigel Geoffrey Brennan, an Australian photographer, said: “We are very well now mentally and physically.”

They were speaking from an undisclosed location.

“We need a ransom of 2.5 million dollars to free the hostages,” said the intermediary, Adan Nur Siad, who added that he had been in touch with representatives of the Australian police in Nairobi.

Brennan and Lindhout, as well as their Somali fixer, who is also a journalist, were abducted on Aug. 23 on the road from the capital Mogadishu to Afgoye, where they intended to visit refugee camps.

Journalists and humanitarian workers are frequently abducted in Somalia, a country torn apart by unrest since 1991.

Most kidnappings include ransom demands, though some appear to be purely political.

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