Jubilant Fijians celebrated on Friday as 45 UN peacekeepers from the South Pacific nation were released by their kidnappers in Syria after a two-week ordeal.
Fijian leader Voreqe Bainimarama said the prayers of the deeply religious South Pacific nation had been answered with confirmation that fighters from the al-Nusra Front had released the Blue Helmets unharmed.
“I know all Fijians join me in feeling a great sense of relief and joy,” he told an early-morning press conference to welcome the news.
The nation of 900,000, which has a long history of involvement in UN peacekeeping missions, had been on tenterhooks about the fate of the troops, who were taken prisoner on the Golan Heights on Aug. 28.
Some Fijians took to the Fijian Ministry of Information’s Facebook page to celebrate the news of the release.
“Fiji prayed and God answered. We are coming home,” Ahmad Khan said, while Leanne Brummell joked the men “will have some stories” to tell when drinking kava, a local root beverage.
Fiji’s military commander Mosese Tikoitoga said his men were already celebrating when he held a video call with them on Friday morning.
“They were in a grog [kava] ceremony after a welcoming service for them, you could hear the singing, drinking in the background, all the laughter, so they were back in the Fijian mood,” he said. “So I assume that all is well with them.”
The peacekeepers were part of the UN Disengagement Observer Force, which monitors a 1974 ceasefire agreement between Israel and Syria on the Golan.
They were forced to surrender their weapons and taken hostage when the al-Nusra militants seized control of the Quneitra crossing following a battle with troops loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
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