SECURITY & TACTICAL ADVISOR Volume 1 November 2013 | Page 40

Every captivity situation will be unique. The suggestions below will be applicable to the majority: • Always try to develop a rapport with the captors. Try to get them to see you as a human being, a member of a family. • Maintain your dignity and self-respect always. • Avoid any dialogue that broaches subjects such as politics and religion. Do not antagonize the captors. • Cooperate during interrogation. Refrain from any hostility towards your captors. • Do not volunteer or disclose any information that could potentially be used against you. • Try to communicate with other captives and with the captors. Find ways to communicate with one another even if you are held apart. Always consider your own safety first and that of your fellow captives. If you get a sense that attempts at verbal or non-verbal communication is too risky, then do not jeopardize safety. • Plan on staying. You may be moved around for a time, but in most situations there will be a final place of internment. Try to keep track of time. Many times your captors will do everything in their power to cause distress including taking timepieces or putting you in a windowless cell. Consider ambient noise and be alert to any changes in temperature that may signal various times of each day. • Maintain your physical and mental well-being as best you can. Eat if food is given to you. Drink whenever you are given the opportunity. Exercise your body and mind daily. You must keep up your strength in the event you need to resist or escape. If you take any medicines on a regular basis, request them from the captors. • Be aware of your surroundings at all times. Make mental notes of your captor’s habits, speech, demeanor, language and any other information you can use to assist your situation and which may reveal vulnerabilities or weaknesses you can exploit. • Get into a daily schedule. Do anything that you can to maintain any level of normalcy to your captivity. This could be exercise, building things with your mind, speaking if allowed, cleaning, bathing if possible, housekeeping or meditation. • If your captors discuss your release, do not let elation blindside you. This may just be another tactic by your captors to enhance cooperation, gain valuable information or lies to keep you down. • Be cognizant of any rescue attempts. Follow instructions by the captors or your liberators and expect to be initially treated as a hostile until they have identified you and the situation has stabilized. The number of kidnappings is growing worldwide. International awareness has increased transcending boarders. Kidnapping has been integrated between transnational criminal organizations and terrorist groups in an organized structure. As we invariably search for solutions to this growing epidemic, the kidnap organizations will find ways to navigate around our solutions. It is highly unlikely that any one framework will impede the suppression of kidnapping. For organizations, a clear policy and specific guidelines on kidnapping are absolutely essential, but not enough. Situational awareness is a cornerstone to avoidance, but again not a final solution. The only real solution is training. Training provides an ROI that extends far beyond financial components. It gives you the framework with which to think and act to save your life. Dr. Cantor is a highly sought out kidnap & ransom consultant, tactical team leader and trainer, and international security expert. He is CEO of the TRS International Group, offering a plethora of customized services and training, including Anti-Kidnap & Hostage Survival Training Program. For more information, visit trsig.com. 40