Chinese hostage rescued after 3 months in captivity in Philippines dies of kidney failure
By APMonday, March 1, 2010
Rescued Chinese hostage dies in Philippines
MANILA, Philippines — A Chinese man rescued after being held captive by al-Qaida-linked militants for three months in the southern Philippines has died of kidney complications just days after he was freed, police said Tuesday.
Oscar Lu died in a Philippine hospital Monday, three days after security forces rescued him and another Chinese plywood factory worker on southern Basilan Island, where Abu Sayyaf militants had been holding them and demanding a ransom for their release, police said.
Lu, 51, also known as Zi Shun Lu, was in poor health when he was rescued, suffering from a kidney ailment and low blood pressure, regional police commander Sonny David said. Authorities notified his family and arrangements were made for his body to be sent to China, David said.
The two men were abducted by the Abu Sayyaf in November together with a Filipino, who was later beheaded after his family failed to meet a ransom demand.
A day after they were rescued, the militants rampaged through a sleeping Basilan village, killing 12 people, including four children.
Authorities first reported that Saturday’s attack might have been retaliation for the recent killing of an Abu Sayyaf commander and the arrests of two others but later said it appeared to have been a vendetta against the village chief.
The Abu Sayyaf, which is fighting to create an Islamic state in the predominantly Christian nation, has about 400 fighters. It is on the U.S. list of terrorist organizations because of two decades of bomb attacks, kidnappings and attacks on civilians.
Tags: Asia, China, East Asia, Greater China, Hostage Situations, Manila, Personnel, Philippines, Southeast Asia