'My days were miserable': Al Qaeda in Yemen free Bangladeshi UN staff
Al Qaeda in Yemen had abducted the former army lieutenant colonel along with four others as they returned to the southern port city of Aden after a field mission while working for UN Department of Safety and Security.
A Bangladeshi citizen working for the United Nations has been freed after a year and a half abduction by Al Qaeda in Yemen, the prime minister's office said.
"I never thought I would return home," Akam Sofyol Anam told reporters in Dhaka, following his return a day earlier on Wednesday, calling the last 18 months "horrifying".
"I thought the terrorists might kill me anytime", added Anam, a former army lieutenant colonel.
"My days were miserable. There was a fear of death every day; it cannot be expressed in words –– it is seen in films only."
In February 2022, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) kidnapped Anam and four others as they returned to Yemen's southern port city of Aden after a field mission while working for UN Department of Safety and Security.
Anam said that he was not physically tortured, but had often been kept blindfolded.
"I couldn't see the sky for months," he said, adding that he was moved repeatedly from place to place.
He said that he had "no idea how much money they wanted or what was their demand", adding that he thought he had been "targeted as I was an UN official."
Anam "expressed his gratitude to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina for her role in rescuing him", the premier's office said, releasing a picture of the two meeting.
The New Arab reports that "the fate of the four other abductees, who are Yemeni nationals, remains unknown."
Yemen's conflict began in 2014 when Iran-allied Houthi rebels took the capital Sanaa, prompting a Saudi-led coalition to intervene the following year to prop up the internationally recognised government.
AQAP and militants loyal to Daesh have thrived in the chaos.
Formed in a merger of Al Qaeda's Yemen and Saudi branches, AQAP has carried out attacks on both rebel and government targets in Yemen, as well as foreigners.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed directly or indirectly in Yemen's war.
But hostilities have sharply declined since a six-month, UN-brokered truce came into effect in April last year, even after it lapsed in October.