An American citizen found in the suburbs of Damascus on Thursday says he was detained after crossing into the country by foot on a Christian pilgrimage seven months ago.
The man in question was later identified as Travis Pete Timmerman, aged 29, from Missouri, last seen in the Hungarian capital Budapest in late May.
He appears to be among the thousands of people released from the country’s notorious prisons after rebels reached the Syrian capital over the weekend, toppling President Bashar al-Assad and ending his family’s 54-year rule.
As video of Timmerman emerged online on Thursday, he was initially mistaken by some for Austin Tice, an American journalist who went missing in Syria 12 years ago. The footage showed a group of men gesturing at a shaken-looking pale man with a beard who was laying on the floor, identifying him as “an American journalist”.
In the video, Timmerman could be seen lying on a mattress under a blanket in what appeared to be a private house. A group of men in the video said he was being treated well and would be safely returned home.
There was no immediate comment from US officials travelling with the US secretary of state Antony Blinken in Jordan.
According to reporters at the scene, a remarkably relaxed Timmerman said he went to Syria on a pilgrimage. He said he had crossed the border from Lebanon on foot before being detained, and imprisoned for seven months. Locals reported finding him naked and barefoot in the Damascus suburbs, while Turkish state news agency Anadolu said he had been released from the notorious Sednaya prison.
Video shared by Syria television showed Timmerman saying a Syrian man had helped him and another woman escape the prison where they had been held following the collapse of the regime. Timmerman told Al Arabiya that he had heard others being tortured while he was in detention, but he had not been mistreated.
“It was OK. I was fed. I was watered. The one difficulty was that I couldn’t go to the bathroom when I wanted to,” he said. “I was not beaten and the guards treated me decently.”
The discovery of one US citizen sparked hopes among some that those combing Syria’s expansive network of detention centres, jail cells, and military hospitals used to detain and torture people could locate others long disappeared under the reign of Bashar al-Assad.
Assad’s brutal regime collapsed rapidly amid a sweeping insurgent advance less than a week ago, with Syrians rushing to detention facilities to force open the doors and liberate those inside. Foreign nationals, including Lebanese and Jordanians, walked free among the tens of thousands of Syrians, including some who had been detained in unknown locations for decades.
Family and supporters of Austin Tice have long said they believe he is still alive, after he was captured in the Damascus suburb of Daraya in August 2012 while working as a freelance journalist for CBS, the Washington Post and McClatchy newspapers.
Multiple sources including a former Czech ambassador to Damascus, long the only point of contact between Syria and the western world, said that Tice was being held by the Syrian state despite a video released in late 2012 which purported to show him in the captivity of an armed group.
Jacob Tice, Austin’s brother, told Christiane Amanpour of CNN earlier this week: “We have heard from sources that have been vetted by the US government that Austin is alive and he has been well taken care of, those reports are recent, they are fresh and we have every confidence that they are accurate.”
The FBI have offered a reward of up to $1m for information that could see Tice return safety, as investigators search the country. The US government’s chief hostage negotiator Roger Carstens is reportedly in Beirut, while the US has conveyed messages to insurgent group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham now in charge in Syria that locating Tice is a priority.
Mouaz Moustafa, who heads the DC lobby group the Syrian Emergency Task Force (SETF) which liaises with both rebel groups and the US government, is in Damascus and scouring sites across Syria to try to locate Tice or trace his recent journey.
Maria Cure, of SETF, said: “He has made it a priority while he’s there to find all Americans wrongfully detained in Syria, including Majd Kamalmaz, Austin Tice and others whose names are not public.”
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