French family released
April 19, 2013A French family with four young children, kidnapped at gunpoint in northern Cameroon, has been freed after two months in captivity at the hands of Nigerian Islamist militants. They returned to safety in the Cameroonian capital, Yaoundé on Friday.
DW's correspondent in Cameroon, Moki Kindzeka, said they arrived at Nsimalen airport looking tired, hungry and unkempt. Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, his wife, his brother and their children Eloi, Andeol, Mael and Clarence, aged 12, 10, 8 and 5 years respectively, shook hands with officials before being driven off to the French embassy in Yaoundé.
A handful of French citizens were at the airport to greet the new arrivals, but were not given access to them. One of the well-wishers, Charlotte Dipanda, told DW she was happy the family had been released though it was "not good to stigmatize the situation and say Cameroon was a dangerous country." She added though that she did not want to go "to the border in the area where kidnappings can take place."
Captivity was long and difficult
The family were on holiday near Waza national park in north Cameroon, some 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the Nigerian border when they were kidnapped by armed men on motorcycles.
Tanguy Moulin-Fournier, the father of the family, gave no specifics in a brief radio interview, beyond saying the group learned their release was imminent just a few hours beforehand and that their return to safety went well.
Their two-month captivity "was long. It was difficult. It was hard physically and psychologically," he told France Inter radio. He made no comment on how they had been released.
Cameroon's government spokesman and Minister for Communication, Issa Tchiroma Bakarirnment, also sidestepped this question when it was put to him by DW on Friday.
Other officials from Cameroon and France also offered no details on how the family was freed and it was not clear whether there were concessions to the kidnappers.
Ransom doubts
Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri is a human rights lawyer based in Lagos and founder of the group Spaces for Change which promotes community engagement. She says intense secrecy surrounds security matters in Nigeria, but going by the character of Boko Haram it would have been "inescapable, impossible for the group to have been released without a ransom."
She added that among media circles and the human rights community there was "very strong doubt that no ransom had been paid."
Boko Haram has been waging a campaign of bombings and shootings across Nigeria's north. They are held responsible for more than 790 deaths last year, and dozens more since the beginning of this year.
French President Francois Hollande said authorities made contact with the kidnappers of the Moulin-Fournier family through intermediaries, and negotiations intensified in recent days.
He denied any ransom had been paid.
"France has not changed its position, which is not to pay ransoms," he said.
France has come under criticism over what diplomats and analysts say is an unofficial policy of indirectly paying ransoms through middlemen over the years.
French Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius, is due to meet the family in Yaoundé and said he might bring them back to France early on Saturday.
Other French hostages still being held
Moulin-Fournier is an employee of the French gas group GDF Suez and worked in Yaoundé.
Last month, a video surfaced showing a man who appeared to be Moulin-Fournier. The man said his family was in the custody of Boko Haram which wanted all its members freed, especially women and children held in Nigerian and Cameroonian custody.
Neither the authorities in Nigeria nor Cameroon reported that any Boko Haram members were freed. Cameroon has denied it is holding any militants.
Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri said that if militants are released, it is possible that the information is not made available to the public.
The kidnapping on February 19 came as thousands of French troops were deeply involved in a military intervention against Islamist extremists in the West African country of Mali, and a statement by France recalled that eight other French citizens are still being held hostage in the Sahel region of Africa.