Africa

UN Mali peacekeepers find Canadian and Italian kidnapped in Burkina Faso in 2018

BAMAKO, Mali (AFP) – A Canadian woman and her Italian partner kidnapped in Burkina Faso in 2018 have been found alive in the northwest of Mali by United Nations peacekeepers, diplomatic and U.N. sources said on Saturday.

“U.N. blue helmets found an Italian citizen and a Canadian citizen near Kidal, who had been taken hostage in Burkina territory in 2018,” a security official from the U.N. mission in Mali, MINUSMA, told AFP.

A diplomatic source named the two as Edith Blais and Luca Tacchetto.

“Both are well. They are under our protection. They will be transferred to Bamako on Saturday and then flown home to their respective countries,” the security official said.

No information was immediately available about the circumstances in which the two were found.

Blais, from Quebec, and her partner Tacchetto, from Venice, disappeared in mid-December 2018 while traveling through the west African country.

The couple, who are both in their 30s, were driving by car to Ouagadougou from Bobo-Dioulasso, more than 360 km (224 miles) west of the capital, when all trace of them was lost, according to Blais’s family.

They had been planning to go to Togo to work on a humanitarian project.

In April 2019, a Burkina government spokesperson said the two had been abducted and probably taken out of the country, but that they were not in any danger.

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