Friday, September 24, 2010

News Update Abductors demand ransom

Living their nighmare: Wong (left) and Chua during an interview at their house in Kota Kinabalu on Tuesday. --Photo: The Star.


KOTA KINABALU - FILIPINO gunmen in the southern Philippines who have abducted two Sabahans are demanding a RM2 million (S$857,500) ransom from their families.
The families of kidnapped seaweed farm manager Tsen Vui Chung, 42, and his cousin Lai Wing Chau, 33, a supervisor, have no resources to raise the money. They are pinning their hopes on the Government to help secure the release of the duo.
'We are ordinary people. Where can we find such money?' Mr Tsen's wife Chua Mui Ling said on Tuesday as she confirmed that the abductors were demanding RM2 million for the release of her husband and Mr Lai who were abducted from Pulau Sebangkit on Feb 7.
Sitting next to Mr Tsen's 64-year-old mother Wong Shui Khau, a teary-eyed Mui Ling said they were hoping to meet Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak when he visits Sabah on Thursday. 'All we want is just 10 minutes of his time to tell him of our plight,' she said.
Mui Ling, who has an 11-year-old son and 15-year-old daughter, said they received a call about a week ago for the first time after two months of silence. 'Tsen and Lai told us they were okay and not harmed,' she said, adding that since the abduction seven months ago, they had received at least one call a month from the abductors but there had been silence from July 1 till early this month.
She said the abductors had informed a relative of theirs about the amount needed to be paid for the release of the two men. The two were abducted by gunmen from Pulau Sebangkit before being taken across the border to island hideouts in the Tawi Tawi area in the southern Philippines. -- THE STAR/ANN