what you want is what you get..now enjoy it!
Sikat kaayo ni nga reporter kung ma luwas ni siya.... hehe
gi bandila nato si ces drillon sa mga lalaki didto!! gi lupang hinirang nato.. hehehehe
pustaanay pa....kung makalingkawas si ces aning iyang "kidnap2x" samot ka taas ang garbo ani.
i think "christiane amanpour" wannabe ning bayhana. pastilan na lang pagkalayo...wa pa ni kaabot sa kumingking sa mga accomplishments ni christiane.
kining klasi nga reporting aning bayhana pang tabloid.
f she goets out alive, maayo unta lesson ni niya.
Just my thoughts. Having lived in Marawi City for most of my life, I've experienced being present during the release of kidnap victims from time to time. They sometimes arrived via Huey helicopters at the Mindanao State University oval/grandstand, from the "rescue point". And most of the stories you hear from the kidnap victims aren't as violent and as sadistic as some of you depict here. It all depends on the kidnappers--granted most if not all of them want money (ransom), but some of them have certain beliefs and ideologies too.
I recall the kidnapping of Fr. Michel de Gigord, a French priest sometime in the mid-80's. In his second kidnapping (yes, 2nd), his niece Benedicte was with him (visiting) and she too was abducted. After their eventual release, Fr. de Gigord said that the kidnappers were very polite and well-mannered, and even assured him that if anyone even touched his niece, they would shoot the person on sight (she was very pretty). Later on, local authorities and military sources would say that the kidnapping was politically motivated, and sometimes the politics of the incident is even more important than the ransom--the ransom sometimes can hide the true reason for such incidents, because people are almost always blinded by money.
-RODION
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