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Crime Statistics > Kidnappings (most recent) by country

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Showing latest available data.
Rank   Countries  Amount 
# 1   United Kingdom: 3,261 kidnappings 
# 2   South Africa: 3,071 kidnappings 
# 3   Canada: 2,933 kidnappings 
# 4   Belgium: 994 kidnappings 
# 5   Tunisia: 555 kidnappings 
# 6   Peru: 491 kidnappings 
# 7   Portugal: 432 kidnappings 
# 8   Romania: 383 kidnappings 
# 9   Kuwait: 281 kidnappings 
# 10   New Zealand: 257 kidnappings 
# 11   Japan: 205 kidnappings 
# 12   Switzerland: 203 kidnappings 
# 13   Italy: 124 kidnappings 
# 14   Poland: 118 kidnappings 
# 15   Saudi Arabia: 107 kidnappings 
# 16   Germany: 88 kidnappings 
# 17   Croatia: 80 kidnappings 
# 18   Chile: 74 kidnappings 
# 19   Bolivia: 46 kidnappings 
# 20   Czech Republic: 28 kidnappings 
# 21   Lithuania: 26 kidnappings 
# 22   Luxembourg: 23 kidnappings 
# 23   Azerbaijan: 20 kidnappings 
# 24   El Salvador: 19 kidnappings 
= 25   Latvia: 16 kidnappings 
= 25   Denmark: 16 kidnappings 
= 25   Costa Rica: 16 kidnappings 
= 28   Albania: 15 kidnappings 
= 28   Hungary: 15 kidnappings 
# 30   Belarus: 14 kidnappings 
# 31   Cyprus: 12 kidnappings 
# 32   Slovakia: 10 kidnappings 
# 33   Austria: 9 kidnappings 
= 34   Slovenia: 8 kidnappings 
= 34   Uruguay: 8 kidnappings 
# 36   Morocco: 6 kidnappings 
# 37   Oman: 5 kidnappings 
= 38   Finland: 2 kidnappings 
= 38   Iceland: 2 kidnappings 
Total: 13,973 kidnappings  
Weighted average: 358.3 kidnappings  



DEFINITION: Total recorded kidnappings. Crime statistics are often better indicators of prevalence of law enforcement and willingness to report crime, than actual prevalence.

SOURCE: The Eighth United Nations Survey on Crime Trends and the Operations of Criminal Justice Systems (2002) (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Centre for International Crime Prevention)

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COMMENTARY     

Scarlett
8th December 2009
What about Mexico and all of the killings and kidnappings committed by the drug cartels and crooked cops? Weird they're not on the list.
Darla (Canada)
15th November 2009
The high number of kidnappings reported for Canada surprised me until I thought about it. In Canada, the abduction of a child by the "non-custodial" parent is reported as a kidnapping (not a domestic or custodial dispute). Occaisionally a divorced parent will pick up their child for visitation and go to the other side of the country with no intension of returning the child. It is then reported as a kidnapping to prompt immediate action by the police in that jurisdiction to apprehend the parent and return the child.
Louis Wittner
28th July 2009
Where are the internal and cross border kidnappings going on in the US and in Mexico?
Ian Graham
Staff Editor

17th May 2005
Gunmen kidnapped an Italian aid worker from the CARE International aid agency on May 16 in Kabul, the capital of Afghanistan. The car the woman was traveling in was intercepted and blocked by another car.

The area of Kabul where the Italian was kidnapped has several guest houses and restaurants that are popular with foreigners. On May 8, a bomb attack in an Internet café in the same area killed three people, including a U.N. worker from Myanmar.

Aid agencies operating in Kabul have warned to staff to keep a low profile in recent weeks following two unsuccessful kidnapping attempts. In April, an American man was forced into the trunk of a car by kidnappers but managed to jump out. In another incident, gunmen intercepted a car carrying foreigners but the driver escaped. A British adviser to the government was killed in a shooting near a U.N. guest house in March.

In October of last year, three U.N. workers were kidnapped in Kabul and held for 27 days before being released. The Afghan government said the October kidnapping was committed by a gang of criminals hired by a Taliban splinter faction that threatened to kill them unless Taliban prisoners were freed.

Taliban guerrillas have attacked and killed dozens of aid and election workers since launching an insurgency after they were forced from power by U.S.-led forces in 2001 for refusing to hand over Osama bin Laden. But most of their attacks have been in rural areas of the country, particularly in the south and east.

Ian Graham
Staff Editor

5th April 2005
Colombia’s second-largest guerilla group – the National Liberation Army or ELN – has refused to stop carrying out kidnappings, saying the 3,000-member group needs the money from ransoms to operate. The government has insisted on an end to kidnappings as a precondition for peace talks.

In the first half of 2004, 966 people were kidnapped in Colombia, less than half of the 1,906 people kidnapped in the same period of 2003. An average of 3,000 people were kidnapped in the country each year from 1996 to 2003.

Ransom payments over the eight-year period were estimated at $57 million, with an average ransom of $20,000. The estimated cost to the economy was $150 million, including loss of income, and the government also spent $110 million to crack down on abductions.

Most kidnappings were carried out by the FARC and the ELN, left-wing rebel groups that have waged a 40-year conflict against the state.

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