Last Updated: Wednesday, 22 August 2007, 09:12 GMT 10:12 UK  

           
            Kidnapped farmer speaks of ordeal  
                   
                  Mr Gregor says he will not be seeking another bride online 
            An Australian farmer who flew to Mali in West Africa believing he 
was set to marry a woman he had met on the internet - only to find himself 
taken hostage and held to ransom - has told the BBC about his ordeal. 
            Des Gregor, a sheep farmer from outside Adelaide in south 
Australia, had been hoping to meet up with and marry a woman named Natasha, who 
he believed was a Liberian refugee in her 20s. 

            But on his arrival in the Malian capital, Bamako, he was taken 
hostage with his kidnappers demanding $86,000 ransom. 

            Mr Gregor told BBC World Service's Outlook programme that the 
isolated nature of farming meant it was difficult to meet people, so he had 
turned to the internet to find his would-be wife. 

            "I didn't really commit myself to her - I thought, 'that can come 
once she comes out here'," he said. 

            Machete and pistol 

            Mr Gregor had first met "Natasha" in December last year, and they 
exchanged photographs. 

            Then in April, he received an email from her "dropping the bomb" 
that she had a deposit of gold as a dowry, and if they married, Mr Gregor would 
receive US$86,000. 

            Mr Gregor - who said he had twice before been deceived by women he 
had met on the internet - said this initially made him think he was being 
scammed. 

                  You've got to be very, very careful - and if anyone asks you 
for money, turn and run 

                  Des Gregor's internet dating advice 
            "From then on I trod very cautiously," he explained. 

            "But from then on, every question I asked her, she had a legitimate 
answer for - therefore I thought she was genuine." 

            He finally decided to make the journey to Mali in July. 

            "It was a bit of a slack period in our work, so I thought, 'now is 
the ideal opportunity to go and check her out and come back with her'," he 
said. 

            When he arrived at Bamako airport, he was escorted straight through 
customs and put in a car - believing he was being driven to the flat where 
"Natasha" was waiting. 

            Instead, waiting in the room in the two-story building he was taken 
to were two men, one armed with a machete while the other had a pistol. 

            "At the start, I thought they were playing a practical joke on me - 
until they started demanding the money," he said. 

            "Then, when I handed them the money, they asked me where the rest 
of it was. I told them that was all I had, because I knew that Australian 
currency wasn't any use to them." 

            Brother's help 

            They then made Mr Gregor strip naked and lie down, believing he had 
the money hidden somewhere on his body. 

            "After that, they bound my legs while they went through my suitcase 
and pulled everything out of my luggage bags," he added. 

            "It was absolutely terrifying. They were demanding money all the 
time. When they found my credit cards, they had me ring the bank to try to get 
Pin numbers. They were unsuccessful, but then they started making him ring 
farmers back home." 

                    
            Mr Gregor made a phone call to his brother, who immediately guessed 
something was wrong. 

            After being held hostage for 12 days - during which the kidnappers 
threatened to cut his arms and legs off with the machete - Mr Gregor was freed 
through his brother alerting the Australian authorities. 

            "Basically, they [the kidnappers] wanted the money to come through 
Western Union, but my brother told me that the only way that people would be 
prepared to give the money was if it went through the Canadian embassy," he 
said. 

            "It took me two to three days to convince them, and in the end they 
agreed to it. The next day it was sent. 

            "They sent me to the embassy. Once I'd got the money, I was to go 
to a cathedral to meet them. I was prepared to do what they said, but the 
people in the embassy had other ideas and once I got there, they would not let 
me out." 

            Mr Gregor now offers the following advice to anyone seeking a bride 
on the internet. 

            "You've got to be very, very careful - and if anyone asks you for 
money, turn and run." 
           
     

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"

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