Friday, June 24, 2016
by:fettysam
Photos of the three Australians kidnapped by gunmen in Calabar
Peter Zoutenbier, Jack Couranz and Mark Gabbedy are the three
Australians kidnapped in Calabar, their families have confirmed. The
fourth Mr Coot managed to escape.
Mark
Gabbedy, who is understood to originally be from Tasmania but
had worked in Western Australia. He had been working in Nigeria for the
past 15 months as a project manager. Engineer Mr Couranz from Perth
studied at
Curtin University and had been with Macmahon since 2012.
Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Julie Bishop on Friday morning said the
priority for the government was to protect the lives of the hostages and
that limited details about the situation would be released.
Prime
Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the Australian high commissioner was on
the scene and officials were working with local authorities "at the
highest levels".
The workers, employed by Perth-based engineering company Macmahon, were attacked and kidnapped on Wednesday
along with four others; a Newzealander, a Nigerian, and two South
African nationals, by armed gunmen who set upon their four-car convoy.
"A
very intense search is on, with more patrol and surveillance teams
dispatched to the rescue," Cross River Police Commissioner Jimoh
Ozi-Obeh.
The family of Peter Zoutenbier said they were shocked by what had happened.
Mr Zoutenbier’s sister-in-law Tracy Zoutenbier said it was a “real concern” the group of kidnappers had already killed someone.
"Usually that doesn’t happen, so that’s sticking in our heads at the
moment," Mrs Zoutenbier told News Corp Australia. "That’s a real worry.
They’ve already been very violent. We just want to do everything we can to get these guys home safe to all their families."
Speaking
from her Zilzie home, near Rockhampton on the state’s central coast,
Mrs Zoutenbier said the family were expecting to talk with the
Department of Foreign Affairs.
"There’s still a lot of shock, and we don’t know a lot at the moment," Mrs Zoutenbier said. She
explained it was still “very raw” for the family, including Mr
Zoutenbier’s wife and grown children whom remained in Queensland.
"It’s
like you’re in a movie at the moment," Mrs Zoutenbier said. "It’s a bit
hard to take in. It’s a shock. I think it’ll take a few days before it
all sinks in. We’re just all rallying together"
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