Abu Sayyaf kidnapped victims appeal for help; their fates still in limbo
By:
Totie Mesia
Date:
Thursday, February 5th, 2009 
Three weeks after the three workers of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) were abducted while doing humanitarian work for Sulu prisoners in Southern Philippines, they sent an appeal to the world, particularly the local authorities to work on their release. The Abu Sayyaf Islamic group with Al Qaeda ties had been holding them in an undisclosed forested location while demanding that the military with a force of about 1,000 soldiers pull out from the area.
"Please try to... deal with them, try to find a way to pull us out," Eugenio Vagni, the 62-year-old engineer, said in an interview aired by a local radio. "We call on concerned authorities to choose to negotiate with the group, to negotiate and we hope that they will take this effort seriously," said Swiss Andreas Notter, 38, the head of ICRC team abducted in Jolo island on Jan. 15 after a prison sanitation project inspection.----GMA News.tv / Xinhua (02/05/09)
The initial maneuvers to secure their freedom have not worked. Italian Eugenio Vagni, Swiss Andreas Notter and Filipino Mary Jean Lacaba are reportedly treated