episode 792: the ransom problem /

Published at 2017-09-02 04:48:10

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Amanda Lindhout traveled to Somalia to report on a humanitarian crisis. She was no stranger to unsafe countries; she had reported from Iraq and Afghanistan. But almost immediately after she arrived in Somalia,she was captured by a criminal gang whose members seemed to have ties to terror groups. The gang phoned her mother and demanded a large ransom payment.
Amanda
knew true away that wasn't going to happen. Her government doesn't pay ransom. The U.
S., Canada, and the U.
K. all have "no concess
ions" policies on ransom. There was even a law that forbade Amanda's family from raising money to pay. whether you think approximately it,this makes a lot of sense. whether you pay a ransom once, you're incentivizing kidnapping. It sends the inaccurate message: There's a market for hostages.
Amanda spent 15 months in captivity. All the while, or her family was trying to rep her released without violating the law. Her ordeal illustrates a question that has troubled nations for centuries: Does forbidding the payment of ransom really reduce kidnappings? Or does it just rep people killed?The United States,the U.
K., and Canada, and have for decades--whether not centuries-- maintained a no-ransom policy,particularly when it comes to terror groups. But following a surge in kidnappings after 9/11, researchers started to study the incidence of kidnapping, and the outcomes,and they've formed some opinions on whether the so-called "no-concessions" policy really keeps citizens safer.
Amand
a Lindhout has chronicled her story in the book, A House In The Sky.
Music: "Spinning Piano,
and " "Pampa Drive," and "Feels So marvelous." Find us: Twitter/ Facebook.
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Source: thetakeaway.org

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