British kidnap couple poorly treated
A British couple kidnapped by Somali pirates in October said they
were not being well treated and needed urgent help, according to an AFP
reporter who met them in captivity.
"Please help us, these people are not treating us well," said Rachel
Chandler, captured by pirates with her husband Paul as they sailed their
yacht, the Lynn Rival, in the Indian Ocean on October 23.
They were brought ashore and have been held in separate locations in
central Somalia.
Rachel Chandler made her plea to a surgeon who was allowed to briefly
examine the pair on Thursday, accompanied by an AFP photographer, the
first journalist to see the Chandlers since their capture.
The surgeon, Mohamed Helmi "Hangul", said she was in poor mental and
physical health.
"She is sick, she is very anxious, she suffers from insomnia," Hangul
told AFP.
"But I think she's mainly mentally unwell, it seems. She's very
confused, she's always asking about her husband - 'Where's my husband,
where's my husband? - and she seems completely disorientated," he added.
The pair are being held in separate locations in rugged areas between
the coastal village of Elhur and the small town of Amara, further
inland.
During the visit Chandler looked pale, tired and distraught and
pleaded to be reunited with her husband.
"I'm old, I'm 56 and my husband is 60 years old. We need to be
together because we have not much time left," she said.
She spoke to the doctor in the presence of the AFP photographer, the
first journalist to see the hostages since their kidnapping, from a tent
where she is being guarded by pirates armed with assault rifles.
AFP |