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Justin Hayward reports for CBC Radio
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She was released unharmed on Wednesday evening.
The family received a phone call, and someone on the line said, "Someone wants to speak to you," and the next voice they heard was that of Goulet.
Goulet's family is not making public just how much they paid to secure her safe release. They had said the kidnappers were demanding a ransom of $300,000 US.
Goulet's niece, Nathalie Caya, issued a short statement Wednesday night. Her aunt runs a long-distance phone card business with her husband, Dugue Jean-Louis, and an associate. Their company, MLN Technologies, is incorporated in Canada but the two travel often to Haiti because they not only work there but have a home there.
The Canadian government advises against visiting Haiti, which has suffered political turmoil, including a coup last year, forcing the exile of then president Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
About a dozen Canadians have been held hostage in Haiti since 1999, but all have been released unharmed.
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