Updated: 10/12/2016
I wanted to start a list for all those contractors/civilians that are still missing or are prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
The thing that concerns me the most right now about the current situation, is as the wars wind down and western forces leave, these POW’s and MIA’s will still be out there. And the threat of further incidents have not gone away. Contractors will still be hanging around in those war zones for some time after, and the threats are still there.
So with that said, I wanted to also put this post up top as a page with the hope that contractors or military folks out there will not forget about these people. Better yet, if folks have any input or tips or anything in regards to these cases, they know where to go to get their voices heard. Just write me, or make a comment on this page and help correct the record or bring attention to what needs to be heard.
The other thing that gets me is the lack of accountability. There is not an office or organization that tracks missing or captured contractors, and much of the efforts to find the folks have defaulted to the work of the families and friends.
Below I posted one article that talked about missing folks in Iraq. There is not a lot of media attention on this and hopefully this will be a good source for those in the media to use or collect info to help in investigations. Or just bring attention to the matter.
I imagine the overall numbers of missing and captured are not correct for the other countries that have missing people. Nor do these statistics go into how many local nationals are missing or are prisoners. Local nationals certainly contributed in these wars as contractors, and their sacrifice should not be forgotten or ignored.
Never forget, and let’s get these folks home. –Matt
Contractors /Civilians Missing or Captured in Iraq (from Wikipedia)
USA:
Kirk von Ackermann, disappeared on October 9, 2003 after leaving a meeting at FOB Pacesetter. His vehicle was found abandoned later that same day. He is presumed dead.
Timothy Edward Bell, a contractor for Halliburton, went missing on April 9, 2004. He was never seen in a hostage video and was declared legally dead in 2010.
Aban Elias, an Iraqi-American engineer from Denver, was shown being held hostage in a video on May 3, 2004. He has not been seen or heard from since.
Radim Sadeq Mohammed Sadeq, also called “Dean Sadek”, a businessman kidnapped on November 2, 2004, in Baghdad. He was shown in a video that month and in another video dated Christmas Eve but released in late January on NBC. He has not been seen or heard from since. His kidnappers demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners.
Jeffrey Ake, a contractor, was kidnapped on April 11, 2005, and shown in a videotape two days later. He has not been seen or heard from since. His kidnappers demanded $2 million in exchange for his release. After three weeks of negotiations, the kidnappers cut off all communication. Ake is presumed dead and his family held a private funeral for him in the summer of 2014.
South Africa:
Andre Durant, Callie Scheepers, Hardus Greeff and Johann Enslin, four contractors, were abducted at a bogus roadblock in Baghdad by unidentified men on December 10, 2006, along with five Iraqis. The Iraqis were released two days later. The kidnappers demanded $8 million ransom. Ten days after the abduction, Andre spoke to his wife briefly in a “proof of life” phone call. There were some talks that these four were still alive in January 2007, but since then there has been no word on their fate.
Canada:
Rifat Mohammed Rifat, an Iraqi-born prison worker, he was taken hostage on April 8, 2004. He is still missing.
Egypt:
Samuel Edward, an engineer working for Iraqna Mobile Company, was kidnapped on September 26, 2005, in Baghdad. His Iraqi driver was left unharmed.
Germany:
Sinan Krause, a technician at the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, was kidnapped on February 6, 2007, with his mother Hannelore in Baghdad. Their kidnappers demanded that Germany withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. Hannelore was released on July 10, 2007, but Sinan hasn’t been seen or heard from since a video was released on September 11, 2007. The video was recorded before Hannelore was released. It showed Sinan saying goodbye to his mother. Their kidnappers issued a final 10-day deadline in the video for Germany to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. They threatened to slit Sinan’s throat if their demand was not met. On April 24, 2008, his father appealed to the captors to release his son. The kidnappers ignored the plea and Sinan’s fate is unknown.
Kenya:
Moses Munyao and George Noballa, engineers from the Iraqna telephone company, were reported kidnapped after an ambush on January 18, 2006. They were never found.
Palestinian Territories:
Rami Daas, a 26 year-old Palestinian student, was reported kidnapped by his family on May 9, 2005, by gunmen in the northern city of Mosul. His fate is unknown.
Contractors/Civilians Missing or Captured in Afghanistan (from Wikipedia)
USA:
Caitlan Connemara Coleman, a tourist, was kidnapped along with her Canadian husband Joshua Ainslie Boyle by the Taliban in October 2012. Coleman was seven months pregnant at the time and has since given birth in captivity. The couple appeared in two hostage videos sent to their families in 2013. In November 2015, Coleman’s family received a letter from her stating she had given birth to a second son in captivity.
Canada:
Joshua Ainslie Boyle, a tourist, was kidnapped along with his American wife Caitlan Connemara Coleman by the Taliban in October 2012 in Wardak province. Coleman was seven months pregnant at the time and has since given birth in captivity. The couple appeared in two hostage videos sent to their families in 2013, and reappeared in new video footage in 2016, although it was not known when the video was taken. Boyle was previously married to Zaynab Khadr, of the notable Pakistani-Canadian family.
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With Withdrawal Looming, Trails Grow Cold for Americans Missing in Iraq
By JACK HEALY
May 21, 2011
BAGHDAD — The last Americans missing in Iraq followed disparate paths to an uncertain fate. They arrived from Indiana and North Carolina, Chicago and Denver. They came out of a sense of duty, in search of a paycheck, or hoping to reclaim a homeland they had fled decades earlier.
But the lives of the eight men — seven private contractors and the only American service member who remains unaccounted — are a painful fragment of the war’s legacy, a haunting piece of unfinished business that the military will leave behind when it withdraws by the end of the year.
“He called and said, ‘I’m catching a plane tomorrow and I’ll be home,’ ” said Jim Ake, whose son Jeffrey, a businessman from Indiana, vanished in 2005. “It didn’t happen. That was the last we heard from him.”
Like scores of other tasks — running convoys, flying helicopters and tracking incoming mortar fire — the military will soon leave the job of determining the fates of the missing largely to civilians. The military is still finalizing its plans, but the cases of the seven contractors are expected to be handed over to the American Embassy, with the missing soldier’s case going to the United States Central Command.
“It’s not like anybody’s saying, ‘O.K., we’re done, let’s forget these guys,’ ” said Col. Michael Infanti, who supervised a unit that searches for the missing. “It ain’t happening.”
Even so, hope has drifted into a nagging uncertainty about the men’s fates, leaving families afraid that they will never find answers. Relatives who once received daily updates from F.B.I. agents and diplomats now go months without hearing from investigators. When they do, there are few breakthroughs. Years have passed without fresh leads, videos or phone calls from their kidnappers.
“We don’t know if he’s dead or alive,” said Kazwan Elias, whose brother, Aban, an Iraqi-American engineer from Denver, was kidnapped seven years ago. “We don’t know if they beheaded him or he’s in a jail somewhere. We just don’t know.”
The military has declared other kidnapping victims dead, even without recovering their bodies, and some family members have bowed to what seems like that inevitable conclusion. Others, though, hang their hopes on the transom between an administrative classification of “missing” and “deceased.”
In a fifth-floor Baghdad apartment overlooking the American Embassy and the heavily secured Green Zone, Sabriya Mahdi Naama clutches the belief that her husband, Abbas Kareem Naama, who was known as Tim, is alive after more than five years missing.
“I still believe he’s somewhere,” Ms. Naama said. “I am sure.”
Mr. Naama was a colonel in Saddam Hussein’s army who fled Iraq with his family in 1991, settling in San Diego. They became naturalized American citizens and supported Mr. Hussein’s ouster.
Mr. Naama met with Pentagon officials before the war, his family said, and his grown daughter wrote op-ed articles calling for the liberation of Iraq’s people.
In 2003, he returned to Iraq on the heels of the American Army. After a brief stint with the Coalition Provisional Authority, Mr. Naama, who was also a pharmacist, went to work with the health office of Iraq’s Defense Ministry, his family said.
He was taken one morning in 2005 as he left home to buy a newspaper. He was 58.
Three months later, the family received a phone call demanding $150,000 in ransom. They did not know who the callers were — Al Qaeda? The Shiite militias from the slums of Sadr City? — or if they were even the real kidnappers. But the family decided to pay them anyway, dropping off the money near an old soda factory.
Numerically speaking, the missing Americans — Jeffrey Ake, Aban Elias, Abbas Kareem Naama, Neenus Khoshaba, Bob Hamze, Dean Sadek, Hussain al-Zurufi and Staff Sgt. Ahmed Altaie — are little more than a footnote in Iraq. Their number pales in comparison to the thousands of Iraqis who disappeared during the bloodletting following the United States invasion. More than 10,000 Iraqis were kidnapped by criminal gangs, Sunni extremist groups and Shiite militias during the bloodiest years of sectarian fighting.
Iraq remains battered by the losses. Parents, siblings and children still line up at morgues to page through photo albums of the nameless dead. Farmers, construction workers and government investigators regularly unearth mass graves filled with dozens, sometimes hundreds, of bodies. There is even a television show devoted to tracking down the vanished.
The only American service member among the missing is Sergeant Altaie, whose family fled Iraq when he was 9 years old and settled in Ann Arbor, Mich. Some combination of homesickness and a love for both the United States and Iraq spurred him to join the Army in 2004, and he deployed to Baghdad the next year.
He frequently went “outside the wire” of the military bases to meet his wife, whom he had met on an earlier trip to Baghdad, family members said. One night in October 2006, while visiting his wife’s apartment in Baghdad’s cosmopolitan Karada neighborhood, a gang grabbed him and shoved him into a car.
A few months later, Intifadh Qanbar, an uncle in Baghdad, said, a nine-second video of a man who appeared to be Sergeant Altaie was posted on a jihadist Web site. He looked thinner and haggard, and spoke into the camera. The video had no sound, so his last recorded words were a mystery.
“He never came back,” said Mr. Qanbar, who has been closely involved in the case.
Mr. Qanbar, who works as an aide to the Iraqi politician Ahmed Chalabi, parlayed his connections to try to find Sergeant Altaie. He said he spoke with detained insurgent leaders in jail and wrote letters to kidnappers, promising to forgo vengeance for any word on his nephew’s whereabouts.
“I was so close to getting him out so many times,” Mr. Qanbar said. “I could feel it.”
But he said he kept losing the trail.
Jeffrey Ake, the Indiana businessman, had traveled safely through Iraq once before, and believed he could navigate its treacheries. In 2005, a day before he was to fly home from his second trip to Iraq, a group of men stormed the water-bottling plant where he had been working and whisked Mr. Ake away.
The next weeks were a frenzy of hope and fear.
Mr. Ake’s captors called his family in La Porte, Ind., and — with the F.B.I. listening in — demanded a ransom of $2 million, Mr. Ake’s father, Jim, said. The family asked for proof that Mr. Ake was alive, testing the kidnappers by asking for the name of a family dog. When they heard the answer — “Gizmo” — they knew.
“He was alive,” Jim Ake said.
But when the military raced to the coordinates of the traced call, they found nothing more than a cellphone lying by the road.
The kidnappers stopped calling, and the trail went cold. As months, then years, passed, the family sold Jeffrey Ake’s business, and the elder Mr. Ake said he turned his attention to helping his son’s wife and four children, getting them to piano lessons and basketball games.
“You just do what has to be done,” he said. “It’s so sad that this could ever happen, but it happened. You have to get on with it.”
Story here.
you guys are not forgotten.
Comment by Derek Day — Tuesday, October 4, 2011 @ 9:11 PM
you ARE NOT forgotten…we really need to keep getting the word out because you never even hear about these guys going missing or being killed. it is a damn shame…
Comment by Jessie Drake-Kunz — Wednesday, March 21, 2012 @ 10:26 PM
Definitely. The public really has no idea about this, and yet all of these folks are missing or are prisoners. Never forget….
Comment by Feral Jundi — Thursday, March 22, 2012 @ 10:25 AM
Hi, I am the son of Abbas Kareem Naama the missing Iraqi-American who was Kidnapped September 27, 2005. I with the help of family searched endlessly in Iraq for 7 yrs, I am now back in home in the US and still keep in touch with contacts helping in the continuous search. I want my father back dead or alive, we deserve that much. I also worked with Sergeant Altaie, while in Iraq looking for my father. Sergeant Altaie, was a great man, and I did my best to gather information to help locate him, but was unsuccessful. I am only writing here today to say thank you for putting up this site and providing people with the notice that we still have POW’s MIA’s, Hostages, and dead still missing in Iraq/ Afghanistan. Thanks to you and your followers my father and the men and women out in these war territories will not go forgotten and never a day passes that they are not missed. God Bless you, and our hero’s fighting for our freedom, may they always be looked after and protected, we pray all our troops and civilians overseas make a safe return home and we pray there families continue to stay strong.
Comment by maknaama — Tuesday, June 5, 2012 @ 5:53 AM
@maknaama Thank you for coming onto the website here and sharing your experience. Your father is a hero and I truly hope that someone comes forward with information on his whereabouts. Let me know if you hear anything and I wish your family well.
Comment by feraljundi — Wednesday, June 6, 2012 @ 3:19 AM
It looks like Staff Sgt. Ahmed Altaie has been confirmed dead.
http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCATRE81Q11N20120227
Comment by Steve Hatchett — Tuesday, October 2, 2012 @ 10:08 AM
@Steve Hatchett Thanks Steve for bringing this to my attention.
Comment by feraljundi — Tuesday, October 2, 2012 @ 11:23 AM
Hey folks, Peter Moore just did a IAMA deal at Reddit. If you would like to know about his experience being held as a prisoner in Iraq, this is good. Thanks to Matt at Screaming At Strangers blog for sharing this.
Comment by feraljundi — Saturday, October 27, 2012 @ 12:02 PM
Hopefully all these men can get back home to their loved ones. I myself was taken in northern Sri Lanka by anti gov rebels and I was held for 11 days before my captors sold me back to the firm that I had contracted with. I was not treated very well for the first three days as I was subjected to intense interrogation methods that I am still trying to recover from and this took place almost 4 years ago. I pray that none have to experience what I did and the media doesn’t seem to care about these stories. If I did not have to sign a NDA(non disclosure agreement ) I would have gone to them. We will never forget our fallen and missing brothers.
Comment by Dan "Shadow" — Wednesday, January 13, 2016 @ 6:45 PM
[…] Contractor POW & MIA List […]
Pingback by Iraq: Contractor Randy Michael Hultz Released By Militia After Nine Months, Two Other Security Contractors Remain Captive « Feral Jundi — Thursday, January 19, 2017 @ 4:21 PM