KANANASKIS, Alta.—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned Monday the “cold-blooded murder” of a Canadian beheaded by terrorists in the Philippines after being held hostage for seven months.
Trudeau confirmed the victim was 68-year-old John Ridsdel of Calgary.
Ridsdel was one of four tourists — including fellow Canadian Robert Hall, a Norwegian man and a Filipino woman — who were kidnapped last Sept. 21 by Abu Sayyaf militants from a marina on southern Samal Island.
The militants had threatened to kill one of the three male hostages if a large ransom was not paid by 3 p.m. Monday local time — 3 a.m. ET.
Philippines police said a plastic bag containing Ridsdel’s decapitated head was dumped in a street Monday night by two men on a motorcycle in Jolo, a town in Sulu province.
Trudeau said he was “outraged” by the news.
“Canada condemns without reservation the brutality of the hostage takers and this unnecessary death,” Trudeau said in a hastily assembled appearance before the media in the midst of a cabinet retreat.
“This was an act of cold”blooded murder and responsibility rests squarely with the terrorist group who took him hostage.”
Trudeau said the Canadian government is committed to working with the Philippine government and international partners to “pursue those responsible for this heinous act and bring them to justice.”
On behalf of all Canadians, he also expressed his “deepest condolences” to Ridsdel’s family and friends.
“They have endured a terrible ordeal and this is a devastating moment for all of them.”
Saying that the safety of Canadian citizens is the first priority of the government, Trudeau said the government will not comment or release any information that might “compromise ongoing efforts or endanger the safety of the remaining hostages.”
He did not answer any questions, including whether the government had paid a ransom for Ridsdel or Hall. However, an official said it is long”standing government policy to not pay ransom demands.
Interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose called news of Ridsdel’s execution “shocking and saddening.”
“Incidents like this should remind all of us that the threat of terrorism remains very real,” she said in a statement.
“We must stand with our allies in solidarity against terrorism, which remains the greatest challenge that the world faces today.”
NDP Leader Tom Mulcair called on the Trudeau government to do everything possible to rescue the other hostages and declared that “we stand united in condemning this outrageous and despicable act.”
“Tragic events like this must not lessen our diplomatic resolve to work towards peace across the world,” Mulcair added in a statement.
The hostages were believed to have been taken to Jolo Island in Sulu, where the militants are thought to be holding a number of captives.
“This is such a barbaric act by these people and one would be tempted to think that they should also meet the same fate,” the Associated Press reported Jolo Mayor Hussin Amin as saying by telephone.
Philippine forces were moving to rescue the abductees, the military said.
“Maximum efforts are being exerted … to effect the rescue,” the military and police said in a joint statement.
It said about 400 Abu Sayyaf militants were involved in the kidnappings, AP reported.
The militants reportedly demanded 300 million pesos ($6.5 million US) for each of the foreigners.
In militant videos posted online, Ridsdel and Hall, Norwegian Kjartan Sekkingstad and Filipino Marites Flor were shown sitting in a clearing with heavily armed militants standing behind them. In some of the videos, a militant positioned a long knife on Ridsdel’s neck. Two black flags hung in the backdrop of lush foliage.
The abductions highlighted the long”running security problems hounding the southern Philippines, a resource”rich region that suffers from poverty, lawlessness and decades”long Muslim and communist insurgencies.
Abu Sayyaf emerged in the early 1990s as an offshoot of a separatist rebellion by minority Muslims in the predominantl
The group — which Canada and other western countries consider a terrorist organization — has relied on extortion and huge ransoms earned from kidnappings of mostly Western tourists and missionaries to survive for more than two decades.
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STANFORD UNIVERSITY USA Report
POLITICAL ACTIVITIES
The Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG) has never engaged in peace talks or any other form of nonviolent political activity. It specifically promotes armed struggle as the means of achieving an independent Moro state. [63] The ASG has conducted attacks to destabilize ceasefire agreements and discourage peace negotiations between the government and the MILF. [64] In July 2014, the ASG killed at least 21 Muslims celebrating the end of Ramadan on the island of Jolo, reportedly in retaliation for their support of the peace process. [65]
MAJOR ATTACKS
April 4, 1991: The ASG conducted a grenade attack in Zamboanga City, killing two U.S. evangelists. (2 killed, unknown wounded).[66]
August 1991: The ASG bombed a Christian missionary ship, M/V Doulos. (2 killed, 40 wounded).[67]
April 14, 1995: The ASG attacked the Christian town of Ipil. (53 killed, 48 wounded, ~30 hostages).[68]
April 23, 2000: The ASG conducted its first attack in Malaysia, kidnapping twenty-one people from a tourist resort in Sipadan. These hostages were all released or escaped. (0 killed, unknown wounded, 21 hostages).[69]
May 27, 2001: ASG gunmen kidnapped tourists, including three Americans, from the Dos Palmas resort in Palawan. Six days later, ASG members brought at least some of these hostages to a hospital in Lamitan, taking more hostages and initiating a siege of the hospital by Philippine troops. After the kidnapping, the U.S. and the Philippines conducted massive military operations against the ASG in an attempt to rescue the hostages. Some hostages escaped or were released while others—including two of the Americans—were killed. (0 killed, unknown wounded, 20 hostages).[70]
March 4, 2003: A bomb exploded in a shed outside the main terminal building of the Davao International Airport. An ASG spokesman called a national radio station the following day, claiming responsibility for the attack. (21 killed, 148 wounded).[71]
February 27, 2004: A member of the Rajah Solaiman Movement (RSM), a group closely tied to the ASG, detonated a bomb on Superferry 14, a passenger ferry carrying 900 passengers out of Manila. The ASG claimed responsibility for planning the attack, which was confirmed by a subsequent government investigation. The Superferry 14 bombing was the Philippines’ deadliest terrorist attack and the world’s deadliest terrorist attack at sea. (116 killed, unknown wounded).[72]
February 14, 2005: ASG operatives simultaneously detonated two bombs in Mindanao’s General Santos City and Davao City, closely followed by a third bomb in Makati City. These attacks became known as the “Valentine’s Day Bombings,” after the ASG’s Abu Sulaiman claimed that the bombs were a “gift” to then-President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. (8 killed, 147 wounded).[73]
November 13, 2007: A bomb outside the Philippine House of Representatives killed a congressman and two congressional employees. This operation was attributed to the ASG and was the first bombing attack on the Philippine Congress. (3 killed, 11 wounded).[74]
December 5, 2011: The ASG kidnapped Warren Richard Rodwell, a 53-year-old Australian retired soldier. Rodwell was released in March 2013, reportedly for a $120,000 ransom that has not been acknowledged by the Philippines or Australia. (0 killed, 0 wounded, 1 hostage).[75]
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