Fri. Nov 22nd, 2024
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pakistanvillagescropped
An American citizen has been kidnapped from his temporary home in
Lahore, Pakistan, according to police officials and the U.S. Embassy in
Pakistan.

The man, who has been identified as Warren Weinstein, was abducted
from his home in an area called Model Town by six masked gunmen on Saturday. Weinstein, who is employed by the Virginia-based
consulting firm J.E. Austin Associates, has resided in Pakistan for the
past seven years while working on a development project financed by the
U.S. government.

The gunmen overpowered the guards who were stationed at the front
gate, then stormed into the house and snatched Weinstein from his
bedroom.

According to associates of Weinstein, he had made efforts to
assimilate with the local culture by adopting the region’s dress style
and speaking limited Urdu. Weinstein was scheduled to leave Pakistan on
Monday.

His abduction comes on the heels of the U.S. State Department’s
recently issued warning to Americans on the risks of traveling in
Pakistan. Although no one has yet to claim responsibility for
Weinstein’s kidnapping, there have been numerous incidents of foreigners
being kidnapped by criminals and Islamic extremists in recent months,
including a July 2011 incident when a Taliban-affiliated group claimed
responsibility for the kidnapping of a Swiss couple in Baluchistan,
Pakistan. And because relations between the U.S. and Pakistan have
notably deteriorated within the past year, the danger for Americans
located in the region will likely continue to rise.

Jim Jacobson, president of the Michigan-based humanitarian group
Christian Freedom International, is also well aware of the growing
danger of life in Pakistan. Jacobson, who helped a family of persecuted
Christians rent a house in Model Town, was surprised to learn that
Weinstein was living in the area and had even recognized the house that
he had been staying in.

“Very few Americans have ever stayed in Model
Town, Lahore,” said Jacobson, whose organization has provided hundreds
of Pakistan’s minority Christians—who also face growing persecution,
harassment and kidnapping at the hands of Islamic extremists—with
desperately needed food, clothing, medicine and even political
advocacy.

Officials are also concerned that the increased risk will limit the
ability of aid workers to assist in some of the most underdeveloped
regions of the country.

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