On the morning of 11 April 1986, Keenan was kidnapped by
Islamic Jihad. After spending two months in isolation, he was moved to a cell shared with the British journalist
John McCarthy. He was kept blindfolded throughout most of his ordeal and was chained hand and foot when he was taken out of solitary. The British and American governments at the time had a policy that they would not negotiate with terrorists, and Keenan was considered by some to have been ignored by them. Because he was travelling on both Irish and British
passports, the Irish government made numerous diplomatic representations for his release, working closely with the Iranian government. Throughout the kidnap they also provided support to his two sisters, Elaine Spence and Brenda Gillham, who were spearheading the campaign for Brian's release. He was released from captivity to Syrian military forces on 24 August 1990 and was driven to
Damascus. There he was handed over by the Syrian Foreign Ministry to the care of Irish Ambassador, Declan Connolly. His sisters were flown by Irish military executive jet to Damascus to meet him and bring him home to Northern Ireland. In 1993, he married Audrey Doyle, a physiotherapist. They have two children and live in Dublin. He returned to Beirut in 2007 for the first time since being released 17 years earlier. He wrote of the trip, "I couldn’t say I was happy and excited to be back – it was far more than that. I was falling in love." ==Works==