A sister of Josiebeth Foroozan, the 26th Filipino abducted in Nigeria over the past two months, said yesterday her kidnappers claimed they lost her after she fought back while they were on a pumpboat and she �jumped into the water.�
The younger sister, Jane Gregorio, said her family believed that Foroozan was still alive, doubting sketchy reports reaching Manila that the 37-year-old mother of two may already be dead.
�The kidnappers called up (Foroozan�s Iranian husband) to say that my sister fought back and jumped into the water. But knowing my sister, we believe she wouldn�t do something like that,� Gregorio told reporters at the Department of Foreign Affairs.
�We have high hopes that she�s still alive. We don�t believe she�s dead. I know my sister to be someone of great courage and who wouldn�t do something that can be considered suicidal,� Gregorio said in Filipino, on her way to meet DFA officials to seek help.
She said initial checks done by her family with Nigerian authorities proved �negative� earlier reports that a woman�s body had been recovered in waters where Foroozan and her abductors were believed to have been.
Authorities have counted Foroozan (not Orasan, as previously reported), as the first female victim of a spate of kidnappings victimizing foreigners in Nigeria�s oil-rich Niger Delta.
Unidentified gunmen seized her around midday of Feb. 7 near a bank on Stadium Road in Port Harcourt, Nigeria�s oil capital.
Gregorio, 30, said her sister still managed to call her husband Manouch on her mobile phone before the phone was snatched away by the abductors.
Recalling the call as told by Manouch, Gregorio said: �She was ordered to get off her car and made to board a bus, where she was blindfolded. They traveled for about four hours.
�She said they were already on a pump boat (at the time she made the call). Then somebody grabbed the phone. She�s been out of (cell phone network) coverage since.�
DFA makes distinction
In a press briefing, Foreign Undersecretary Esteban Conejos said Foroozan�originally from San Jose, Mindoro Occidental�might not have been a political target, unlike the previous Filipino hostages, but a victim of a common crime.
Conejos said he had to make this �distinction� to dispel �any apprehension created by the series of events that Filipinos were being targeted� for abduction in the oil-rich African state.
A police matter
But Conejos conceded that this was merely �my assessment,� given the limited information reaching the Philippine government regarding Foroozan.
Conejos said the DFA, through the Philippine Embassy in Abuja, could not confirm �second-hand� reports reaching Manila earlier in the day saying that Foroozan may already be dead.
�All facts (so far gathered indicate) that this is a police case, as distinguished from a national security case, like those of the 24 Filipino seamen and the engineer,� Conejos said in a media briefing.
He was referring to the Jan. 20 incident where the all-Filipino crew members of German-listed cargo vessel Baco Liner II were held captive by militants operating in Warri, Niger Delta; and the Feb. 6 abduction of Winston Helera, an engineer subcontracting for oil giant Shell, also in Port Harcourt. Militants were also believed to be behind Helera�s kidnapping.
Only one call
The Baco crew members were being held allegedly by members of the Movement of the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).
Foroozan has been a resident of Port Harford for the past 17 years and married to an Iranian businessman, Conejos said.
�This Filipina has nothing to do with oil interests,� he stressed.
Her abductors have since contacted her husband only once, on Wednesday night, Conejos said, reading from an embassy report to the DFA.
�We have your wife�
�There was no demand made but (the call) was just to say that �we have your wife�.�
Conejos said government efforts to save all 26 Filipino hostages through peaceful, diplomatic means would be �the same� whether the abductions were a national security or a police matter.
Last month, after the abduction of the 24 seamen, the DFA appealed to the Nigerian government not to resort to a military solution of the hostage crisis.
Conejos noted that of the 121 foreigners abducted in Nigeria last year, only seven were Filipinos.
Even the recent capture of the 24 seafarers could be considered �accidental� since they were not actually workers based in Nigeria, their vessel merely passing through Nigerian waters, he said.