No sign of sister in Syria, brother says
Andy Jones  |  by www.cbc.ca. All rights reserved. 24.05 | 3:29

The brother of a Vancouver woman who disappeared while backpacking in Syria has returned to Toronto empty-handed after searching for her.
"We found a lot of negatives. We know she wasn't doing this, she wasn't doing that," said Matthew Vienneau, who spent the last two weeks looking for his sister Nicole.


"There's no way she could have been snatched on the walk to the bus station. It's way too crowded a street."
Nicole Vienneau, 32, was last seen on March 31, when she left her hotel near Hama for a day trip to a place called the Dead Cities, ancient ruins in northwest Syria.


Matthew Vienneau went to Syria accompanied by Nicole's partner, Gary Schweitzer. They retraced her steps, trying to find clues to her whereabouts.
They also put up posters in English and Arabic and started a website appealing for help.


Vienneau said they looked through a knapsack she had left in her room, which contained most of her belongings, including books, clothing and a journal.
"She actually made an entry the day before she disappeared which describes what she had done in the past two days already. So once again, we knew where in Hama not to go.

"
Nicole Vienneau, an experienced traveller, had backpacked around remote regions of the world before.
Her latest adventure was in the Middle East, where she contacted her mother at least every two weeks. But that stopped seven weeks ago.


"As soon as she hadn't done that, then I knew there was something preventing her from calling," said her mother, Kathryn Murray.
Arlene Star, who met Nicole Vienneau travelling through West Africa last January, said she was shocked when she found out Vienneau was missing.
"She knew what she was doing.

She was very prepared. She knew where she was going next. She had her whole route scheduled and planned out for her.

"
Canada's Foreign Affairs Office and the Syrian police say they're looking into Vienneau's disappearance.
Schweitzer has stayed in Syria to keep searching.
"Are we spending the next couple of months searching, the next couple years searching?

" Matthew Vienneau said.  "Will I be — 50 years from now — on my death bed wondering what the heck happened? And that's just an agonizing thought.

"
Matthew Vienneau has not given up his search, but for now, he's home to be with his mother, who believes her daughter is still out there.
"I have to. She's alive until proven otherwise," Murray said.


Iran continues to enrich uranium and is expanding its program in defiance of a UN Security Council deadline, the UN's nuclear watchdog says in a confidential report.
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and rival Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh met Wednesday for the first time since factional fighting engulfed the Gaza Strip two weeks ago, but failed to reach an agreement on halting rocket attacks on Israel.
Thousands of Palestinians streamed out of a refugee camp in Lebanon overnight Tuesday and early Wednesday during a break in fighting between government troops and Islamic militants.

A 15-year-old boy has died after being shot at a school in Toronto's north end on Wednesday, police said.
A police recording of a call made by an RCMP officer after he fatally shot a young man he had arrested was played at a coroner's inquest in northern B.C.

The brother of a Vancouver woman who disappeared while backpacking in Syria has returned to Toronto empty-handed after searching for her.
Aspirin seems to reduce the risk of colorectal cancer by blocking an enzyme that causes inflammation, researchers have found.
Using antibiotics for two to four weeks is enough to treat Lyme disease and there is no compelling evidence that longer treatments help, U.

S. neurologists said Wednesday in releasing new guidelines.

Giving pure oxygen to people struggling to breathe might harm the brain, while adding carbon dioxide could help, researchers say.

Deal or No Deal's Howie Mandel, The Late Late Show's Craig Ferguson and U.S. comedian George Lopez will each headline a gala show at Toronto's first Just for Laughs festival.

Robert Ash, the children's show host known by generations of Canadian children as Uncle Bobby, has died, according to his former employer.
Canadian bands Billy Talent and Nickelback lead the field of nominees for this year's rollicking MuchMusic Video Awards.
A fossil thought to show feathers on a dinosaur in fact shows the remains of connective tissue, say scientists who have rebutted an earlier study.

Americans are getting more junk e-mail than ever before, but seem less bothered by it, according to a study published Wednesday.
Scientists have found some fungi can turn radiation into an energy source for spurring growth, a discovery that could prove useful in cleaning up radioactive sites.
The U.

S. private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management is part of a second consortium that is in talks to acquire BCE, the communications giant said Wednesday.

The Bank of Montreal said Wednesday that it had eked out a second-quarter profit increase, despite losses on natural gas trading.

Workers at the Voisey's Bay nickel mine in northern Labrador walked off the job Wednesday, forcing the mine to shut down.
As the Canadian dollar continues to surge, Canadians are checking into five-star hotels and opting for luxury vacation packages, some U.S.

tour operators say.

EU lawmakers backed legislation Wednesday that will allow people to chat on cellphones without having to worry about costly roaming fees, even when calling Paris from Prague.
The launch of Sunday shopping on P.

E.I. last weekend opened Charlottetown's racino for gambling, but bar owners are annoyed they still can't run their VLTs on Sundays.

The Toronto Blue Jays will try to continue their recent mastery of the Orioles as the teams resume their three-game set Wednesday night in Baltimore.
Filippo Inzaghi scored two goals Wednesday to help AC Milan win the European Cup title for the seventh time after a 2-1 victory over Liverpool in the Champions League final in Athens.
The Edmonton Oilers will have an extra first-round draft choice at their disposal next year thanks to a condition inserted in last summer's trade that sent Chris Pronger to the Anaheim Ducks.

Read more on by www.cbc.ca. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Matthew Vienneau, Nicole Vienneau
Related news
Post comments
Name
Place
4 + 1 =
Comments