A French Roman Catholic priest abducted in Cameroon by
Islamic militants arrived home Wednesday after a seven-week ordeal he described
as a time of “terrible boredom, sadness and anger.”
Georges Vandenbeusch, who was freed on Tuesday, touched
down at the military air base of Villacoublay near Paris, where President
Francois Hollande greeted him and hailed his “courage” and “self-sacrifice”.
The 42-year-old was kidnapped on November 13 by heavily
armed men who burst into his parish at night in the far north of the central
African country and reportedly took him to neighbouring Nigeria.
The radical Islamist movement Boko Haram, which has
killed thousands of people in attacks against Christians and government targets
in northern Nigeria, claimed responsibility for holding him soon after he was
kidnapped.
The circumstances of his release are as yet unclear, but
both France — often accused of paying ransoms for hostages despite stiff
government denials — and Boko Haram have denied that a ransom was paid.
A source within the Islamist group told AFP Wednesday
they had asked Paris for money through the Cameroon government, but the French
government refused and requested Vandenbeusch be released on humanitarian
grounds because of his status as a clergyman.
“The leadership (of Boko Haram) decided to release the
priest on compassionate grounds and having benefited from his medical
expertise,” the source told AFP.
“The priest offered medical service to sick members
during his period of captivity. The leadership felt there was no longer need
for keeping him.”
Speaking in the Cameroonian capital Yaounde before he
boarded a flight back to France, Vandenbeusch said he had not been mistreated
by his captors despite being kept in “rustic conditions”.
He expressed “great joy” at returning home but said
people should remember those who are still being held hostage.
Vandenbeusch described his time in captivity as a period
of “terrible boredom, sadness and anger because I’m very fond of the parish
where I worked” in Cameroon.
“I was under a tree for a month and a half,” he said,
explaining that his two main guards spoke a local language and not English, he
did not have anything to read, or a radio to listen to.
Speaking at the air base on Wednesday morning, Hollande
warned other Frenchmen and women in high-risk areas to take care and avoid
putting themselves in danger’s way.
“We have to warn those who may be at risk in areas where
there is danger,” said Hollande.
He said this applied not only to “priests who have a
mission to accomplish” but to other French nationals.
France needed to be “rigorous” not to allow other
hostages to be taken, added Hollande.
The Vatican on Tuesday welcomed the priest’s release and
called on the faithful to pray for those still being held around the world.
“We hope that all forms of violence, hatred and conflict
in the tormented regions of Africa be stamped out, as well as elsewhere in the
world,” Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi said.
In his former parish of Sceaux, near Paris, local
faithful expressed joy at his release.
“This church prayed for him a lot. Every day, candles
were lit. You had to believe in it,” said Marie, a 45-year-old worshipper.
In a statement, his family thanked French, Cameroonian
and Nigerian authorities and all those who supported them during the ordeal.
“At this time of joy, we do not forget the other French
hostages, and are thinking of their families,” they said Tuesday.
There are still six French people being held hostage in
Mali and Syria.
Vandenbeusch was abducted from his home near the town of
Koza in northern Cameroon, about 30 kilometres (20 miles) from the Nigerian
border.
He was seized by about 15 people who had first gone to
the nuns’ house, apparently to look for money, giving him time to warn the
embassy.
The priest had been advised not to stay on in an area
designated as a dangerous zone prone to militancy and kidnappings.
In February, a Frenchman employed by gas group Suez was
kidnapped in the same area together with his wife, their four children and his
brother while visiting a national park.
They were taken to neighbouring Nigeria and also held by
Boko Haram, before being released in April.
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