Parents: No Word on U.S. Journalist Missing in Syria

ROCHESTER, N.H. (AP) —

From their New Hampshire home, the parents of a foreign journalist who has been missing in Syria since he was kidnapped more than a month ago appealed to his captors for compassion and any information about their son’s health and welfare.

Thirty-nine-year-old James Foley was kidnapped in northwest Syria by unknown gunmen on Nov. 22, his parents said Thursday. He was in the country contributing videos to Agence France-Press, which has vowed to help secure his release.

Foley’s parents, John and Diane Foley, decided to hold a news conference at their home to make a public plea to his captors because the Foleys haven’t received any information about their son in six weeks.

“We just don’t know anything,” Diane Foley said. “We don’t know who has him.”

Twenty-eight journalists were killed in Syria in 2012, prompting the Committee to Protect Journalists to name Syria the most dangerous country in the world to work in last year.

The Foleys would not discuss any detail about efforts through the U.S. government or otherwise to secure their son’s release. Not long ago, they lived through the same anguish and fear over their son’s safety.

In 2011, Foley was held by government forces in Libya while covering that country’s civil war. Another journalist — South African photographer Anton Hammerl — was shot during their capture and left to die in the desert. Foley and another journalist were released after six weeks.

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