Canadian home after four-month hostage ordeal
By Wojtek Dabrowski
TORONTO (Reuters) – Looking tired and thin, but smiling
brightly, Canadian peace activist James Loney arrived back in
his home country on Sunday after spending four months as a
hostage at the hands of Iraqi militants.
“It’s great to be alive,” Loney, 41, told a group of
reporters shortly after his arrival at Toronto’s Pearson
International Airport.
“For 118 days, I disappeared into a black hole and somehow,
by God’s grace, I was spit out again,” he said, reading from a
prepared notes. “It was a terrifying, profound, powerful,
transformative and excruciatingly boring experience.”
After speaking for about five minutes, Loney was whisked
off by Royal Canadian Mounted Police to a waiting car outside.
Loney, along with Norman Kember of London, England, Harmeet
Singh Sooden, also a Canadian, and Tom Fox, an American, were
kidnapped in Baghdad on November 26 by a group calling itself
the “Swords of Truth.” Little over two weeks ago, Fox’s body
was found at a garbage dump in the city.
On Thursday, the three surviving captives were rescued in a
military operation involving British and American soldiers. The
three are members of the Christian Peacemaker Teams, a group
that advocates nonviolence.
Loney was thankful to his rescuers, singling out the
British soldiers and the Canadian government, saying: “I am
forever and truly grateful.”
He said little of his captors or of his treatment at their
hands and did not take questions from reporters who met him at
the airport.
Loney said now that he is free again he just wants to get
reacquainted with his family and other members of his
community.
“All I really want to do is to love and be loved by the
people that I love,” he said. “The one specific thing might be
to wash a sink full of dirty dishes.”
Patrick Nadon, a friend of Loney’s who was also at the
airport on Sunday, said, “It was just great to be able to give
him a hug and know he was OK.”
“Obviously, he’s lost a lot of weight and the transition of
coming back here is probably going to take some time, but he
looks strong,” he added.
Loney was expected to head to his home town of Sault Ste.
Marie, Ontario at some point.
