New Zealand's foreign minister has confirmed a New Zealand nurse has been held captive by the Islamic State group in Syria for almost six years, information long kept secret for fear her life might be at risk.
The status of nurse and midwife Louisa Akavi, now 62, is unknown but her employer, the International Committee of the Red Cross, says it has received recent eyewitness reports suggesting she might be alive.
The New York Times on Sunday became the first media organisation to name Akavi, ending a more than 5 -year news blackout imposed by the New Zealand government and Red Cross with the cooperation of international media.
The collapse of ISIS has raised hopes Akavi and two Syrian drivers kidnapped with her might now be discovered.
The New York Times reported that as recently as December, Akavi may have been seen by at lest two people at a clinic in Sousa, one of the Islamic State's last outposts.
There were also reported sightings in 2016 and 2017, Red Cross officials said.
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"We continue to work together (with the Red Cross) to locate and recover her," New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters said. "This has been a uniquely complex and difficult case.
"Louisa went to Syria with the ICRC to deliver humanitarian relief to people suffering as a result of a brutal civil war and ISIS occupation.
"Where a New Zealander is held by a terrorist organisation the Government takes all appropriate action to recover them. That is exactly what we have done here."
"We know she is thinking of us and that she will be worried about us too.."
"It remains the government's view that it would be preferable if the case was not in the public domain."
She is the longest-held captive in the history of the International Committee of the Red Cross, and Stillhart called her "a true and compassionate humanitarian."
"If our colleagues are still being held, we call for their immediate and unconditional release."