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Caitlan Coleman and her Canadian husband Joshua Boyle arrived in Canada late Friday, about five years after they were captured by a Taliban-linked extremist network in Afghanistan.
Coleman was pregnant at the time they were abducted and gave birth to four children while in captivity. Boyle said the Islamic Haqqani network killed his infant daughter and raped Coleman during their capture.
Here's what we know about why the couple was in Afghanistan to begin with:
The trip to Afghanistan was not on the couple's original itinerary, according to Sarah Flood, who was close friends with Coleman.
Jim Coleman, Caitlan's father, said that while they were in central Asia, the couple met people who spoke highly of Afghanistan.
"They really and truly believed that if people were loved and treated with respect that that would be given back to them in kind," said Linda Boyle, Boyle's mother.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/10/14/what-were-caitlan-coleman-and-joshua-boyle-doing-afghanistan/764516001/
Caitlan Coleman and her Canadian husband Joshua Boyle arrived in Canada late Friday, about five years after they were captured by a Taliban-linked extremist network in Afghanistan.
Coleman was pregnant at the time they were abducted and gave birth to four children while in captivity. Boyle said the Islamic Haqqani network killed his infant daughter and raped Coleman during their capture.
Here's what we know about why the couple was in Afghanistan to begin with:
- They were attracted to under-developed regions.
- The couple set off in the summer of 2012 for a journey that took them to Russia, the central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, and then to Afghanistan.
- "They were interested in cultures that are under-developed," said Caitlan's mother, Lyn Coleman.
- They didn't travel like typical tourists. They avoided staying in hotels and visiting mainstream attractions while abroad. Josh was quoted by his mother as saying, "Nowhere is too far to walk if you have enough time."
- The previous year, shortly after they got married, Caitlan and Joshua went to Guatemala for a four-month hiking trip.
The trip to Afghanistan was not on the couple's original itinerary, according to Sarah Flood, who was close friends with Coleman.
Jim Coleman, Caitlan's father, said that while they were in central Asia, the couple met people who spoke highly of Afghanistan.
"They really and truly believed that if people were loved and treated with respect that that would be given back to them in kind," said Linda Boyle, Boyle's mother.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/10/14/what-were-caitlan-coleman-and-joshua-boyle-doing-afghanistan/764516001/