Damascus:A former prisoner spearheading a private effort to help find captive US journalist Austin Tice is concerned that deposed Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad may be hiding him to use as leverage in securing his own future.
Nizar Zakka, who was detained in Iran on spying charges between 2015 and 2019, now runs Hostage Aid Worldwide, a non-profit group working with families to free kidnapped civilians. This week he was in Syria in the immediate aftermath of the overthrow of Assad. Both Zakka's group and the US government believe Assad or his former officials are holding Tice, a 43-year-old reporter who was kidnapped in Syria in August 2012.
The overthrow of the Assad clan has allowed thousands of Syrian prisoners -- and one other American -- to escape Syria's notorious detention centres, but many are still missing, including Tice. Tice was working for Agence France-Presse, McClatchy News, The Washington Post, CBS and other media outlets when he was detained at a checkpoint in Daraya, a suburb of Damascus.
Zakka, who is in contact with Syria's new transitional government led by the Islamist rebel fighters of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, has been scouring liberated prisons for signs of the missing American.
Helicopter escape
But he believes that members of the ousted Assad clan or former officials may still be holding him, hoping to use his fate as leverage to secure a ransom or some kind of legal protection. Before the fall of Assad, Zakka had a good idea of where Tice might be.
"The intel we have as late as early January 2024 was that he was in certain places," the Lebanese-American campaigner told AFP in Damascus. "We have been tracking all along. We have intel about where he was at this date, where he was at that date, which prison, which guard." But after the rapid collapse of Assad's rule threw the vast Syrian detention network into chaos, this data could only lead Hostage Aid so far.