Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Nicosia: Praying For A Happy Ending For Armenian Held In Iraq

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Nicosia: Praying For A Happy Ending For Armenian Held In Iraq

    PRAYING FOR A HAPPY ENDING FOR ARMENIAN HELD IN IRAQ
    By Leo Leonidou

    Cyprus Mail
    Sept 22 2005

    WITH Saturday's deadline for the payment of a ransom for the release
    of a Cypriot held in Iraq looming, the man's aunt is anxiously waiting
    for developments.

    Rita Medzadourian yesterday told the Cyprus Mail: "I'm hopeful that
    with expert negotiations, there will be a happy ending. There is
    no news at the moment, but fingers crossed, there will be soon. The
    government knows what it's doing."

    Forty-year-old businessman Garabet Jean Jikerjian was kidnapped from
    his home in Baghdad on August 21.

    A video was released of Jikerjian, who also holds Lebanese nationality,
    with a hooded gunman pointing an automatic weapon at him. Jikerjian,
    was seen pleading for his life, calling for Jetco Trading, the company
    he worked for, to pull out of Iraq.

    The company duly pulled out, but the gunmen then demanded $20,000
    for his release. The sum was paid, but still the gunmen refused to
    release him, raising their demand to $2 million.

    The kidnappers have referred to themselves as 'The Group for the
    Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice' and accused Jikerjian
    of working with an alcohol distribution firm that "deals with the
    occupiers".

    The group initially announced that they had "captured an importer
    of food and liquor in Baghdad who works for a company that deals
    directly with the crusader occupiers of Iraq". They demanded the
    company's "withdrawal from Iraq as soon as possible in order to free
    the Lebanese hostage - otherwise woe on him and you".

    Medzadourian added that, "the kidnappers have now reduced their demands
    from $2 million to $500,000. I am calling on the governments involved
    in this crisis to put pressure on the owner of the company my nephew
    is working for."

    Sources close to the family told the Cyprus Mail that Jikerjian started
    his Iraqi posting in August 2003. Before his posting, Jikerjian was
    working in Nicosia.

    The Foreign Ministry in Nicosia issued a statement saying: "Upon
    being informed of the kidnapping of Garabet Jikerjian, who has both
    Cypriot and Lebanese nationality, the Foreign Ministry has been in
    contact with his family that is based in Lebanon as well as with the
    Lebanese government that is currently handling the matter via their
    Embassy in Baghdad.

    "The Cyprus government is also in contact with the authorities of
    Greece as well as with the Presidency of the European Union. The aim
    of the Cyprus government is to avoid any complications that would
    endanger the life of the hostage. The Cyprus government also respects
    the position of the hostage's family at this difficult time and will
    do everything possible for Jikerjian's release."

    Medzadourian made a tearful plea on Armenian television yesterday.

    "Garabet has done no harm to anybody in his life," she said. "He has
    been to Iraq many times and this was to be the last trip. We are
    a poor family, working hard for a living. We don't have the kind
    of money those people are asking. I beg with all my heart for the
    governments of Cyprus and Lebanon to do everything they can, exert
    all the pressure in their power to help my Garo come out alive.

    "Garebet's boss promised my sister on her deathbed that he would always
    look after her children and now he has to live up to that promise. My
    sister used to be his secretary and the backbone of his company and
    now he needs to put his hand on his heart and repay his promise to her
    son, the son that he sent to Iraq. If anything happens to my nephew,
    he will have his blood on his hands."
Working...
X