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Nova Scotia

Canadian kidnapped in Burkina Faso identified as Kirk Woodman

The family of a Halifax man who was kidnapped in northern Burkina Faso on Tuesday says they are hopeful Canadian authorities will bring him home safely.

Canadian was abducted near border with Niger on Tuesday

Kirk Woodman lives in Halifax but has been working in the mining industry in West Africa. (LinkedIn)

The family of a Halifax man who was kidnapped in northern Burkina Faso on Tuesday saysthey are hopefulCanadian authorities will bring him home safely.

Kirk Woodman works forProgress Minerals Inc., amining company based in White Rock, B.C.

CEO Adam Spencerconfirmed to CBC News that Woodman is based in Halifax but declined to comment further.

Woodman's familysaid in a statement that they will not be speaking publicly and asked for privacy.

"We have faith and trust in Canadian authorities to bring our husband and father home safe. We are hopeful for a fast resolution to the situation."

Woodman has worked in the mining industry for more than 30 years, and joinedProgress Minerals 18 months ago. The mining company has operations inIvory Coast and Burkina Faso, and Woodman has previousexperience working in West Africa.

Burkina Faso's securityminister, Clement Sawadogo, said Wednesday that Woodman was abductedby a dozen gunmen on a mining site owned by Progress Minerals near the border with Niger.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says Canadian officials are aware of the report and are reaching out tohisfamily.

Woodman is the secondCanadian to go missing in Burkina Faso in recent weeks,Sawadogo said.

"We have alerted our entire security presence to find these people," he said.

Quebec resident Edith Blais, 34,and her Italian travel companion, Luca Tacchetto, 30, were last heard from in the western city of Bobo-Dioulasso on Dec. 15.

The office of International Development Minister Marie-Claude Bibeautold Radio-Canada that despite not having any confirmation, they were approaching Blais'scase as they would a kidnapping. Her office declined further comment.

Attacks by Islamist militants have surged in the country in recent months and Burkina Faso has declared a state of emergency in several northern provinces since Dec. 31.

Security has deteriorated as jihadists with links to al-Qaeda and ISIS, including many based in neighbouring Mali, seek to increase their influence across the poorly policed scrublands of the Sahel region just south of the Sahara Desert in West Africa.

With files from Reuters and Preston Mulligan