It’s been 12 weeks with no sign of missing
Vancouver backpacker Nicole Vienneau, last seen leaving the Cairo Hotel in
Hama, Syria on March 31.
Some would have
given up by now.
But her boyfriend,
Gary Schweitzer, is so determined to find her that he’s back in Syria for a
month and has pledged to walk every step of the 42-kilometres from al-Hamrah
to Qasr Ibn Wardan (a castle she may have visited).
“Gary, God love him,
he’s over there doing a grid search,” Nicole’s mother Kathryn Murray, told
The Vancouver Province yesterday, in a rare interview from her home in
Toronto.
“He’s checking every
single thing along the path, any barn, any culvert, any ditch, stopping at
all the houses and talking to everybody just to make sure that from that 42
kilometres, if anybody saw any sign of her, then he’ll find it,” she said.
In an interview with
last month Schweitzer said, “I promised her mom I wouldn’t come home without
her and that is still my intention.”
Nicole’s mother and
stepfather, Bruce, are also making their first trip to Syria next week.
“I need to see it
for myself. It’s been over three months. I need to see the situation and
what she was facing,” Nicole’s mother said.
“In Syria the
parents are very important. (We’re hoping) to be there, (to show) we’re
looking for her, that someone cares a great deal, loves her and wants her
back will have an impact.”
Meanwhile, on-line
efforts are gathering steam.
“Strangers have been
absolutely fantastic,” said Nicole’s brother, Matthew Vienneau. “It’s
incredibly heartwarming to see people dedicate their time and energy to our
search. It gives you great faith in humanity.”
More than 100 people
have donated money to the search efforts. On-line well-wishers have helped
track down hotel guests, translated documents into Arabic and arranged for
free tickets to Syria.
To date, the family has spent $50,000 in plane
tickets, travel, a reward, lawyers and translators.
Yet leads have
slowed to a trickle.
“We’ve had a variety
of false leads as a result of the reward offer,” Vienneau said, citing bogus
ransom requests. “It’s been a grim month in terms of new information. It’s
very tough to keep going.”
Nicole’s mother is
also struggling.
“It’s harder every
day that passes. Not knowing is the most difficult thing I’ve ever
experienced,” she said. “You try not to assume the worst. She is a survivor.
If there is any way to make it through this, she will.”
Canada.Com