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Related: กคKidnappers threaten to kill US hostage: Al-Jazeera กคTwo German security officials confirmed missing in Iraq
 Iraqi newspaper Al Raqeeb displays
pictures April 10, 2004 of two men it said the German embassy in Baghdad
had confirmed went missing on April 7 on a road near the volatile Sunni
town of Falluja. The newspaper named the men as Ritrath Tobias (left),
aged 25 and Thomas Haffenker, 38. [China Daily/Reuters]
| BEIJING, April 11 (Xinhuanet)
-- An Iraqi group claims on Saturday that they were holding 30 foreign hostages
and threatened to decapitate them unless U.S. forces lifted their blockade of
the Iraqi town of Falluja.
|
 UK
hostage(Xinhua/AFP)
| The group, calling
itself the "Brigades of the Hero Martyr Sheikh Ahmed Yassin," said: "We have
Japanese, Bulgarian, Israeli, American, Spanish and Korean hostages," a masked
gunman said in an footage aired by Arab TV station, Al Arabiya. The footage
showed no hostages.
At the time when the group calling
for U.S. forces to lift blockade of the Iraqi town of Falluja, U.S. Marines have
moved a third battalion near Fallujah to join siege of the city, where two
battalions of about 1,200 Marines are already in place, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt
said Saturday.
Kimmitt said Marines would end
their 24-hour-old pause in offensive operations in Fallujah if discussions
between Iraqi politicians and Fallujah city officials do not produce results. He
said the insurgents continued to fire at U.S. forces.
"There is a new battalion, third battalion of
Marines," Kimmitt said.
"Were we not at this
point observing suspension of offensive operations, I think we would have been
much further along, and it could well have been that we would have had the
entire the city by this point," he told reporters in Baghdad.
JAPANESE FM APPEALS FOR RELEASE OF HOSTAGES
| Japanese Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi
appealed on Saturday for the release of three Japanese hostages in Iraq as
protesters called for Tokyo to withdraw its troops to save the captives' lives.
"The three Japanese hostages are private individuals, and
friends of Iraq...The people of Japan and I strongly demand for an immediate and
safe release of the three hostages," she said.
The video message comes with less than 24 hours to go until a deadline set by
the kidnappers, who have threatened to burn the hostages alive if Japanese
troops do not pull out of Iraq.
Kawaguchi's
video, including an Arabic version, will be distributed to TV broadcasters
around the world on Saturday.
Japan was stunned
on Thursday when an unknown group released a video showing the hostages,
blindfolded and with a gun to their heads.
A
Japanese foreign ministry official said the ministry was checking the report and
could not comment whether any Japanese, apart from the three hostages, had gone
missing in Iraq.
There was no word on the
whereabouts of the three hostages and a senior Japanese diplomat sent to Jordan
declined to say whether he had contacted the kidnappers.
KOIZUMI'S
TOUGHEST TEST
Some 1,000
protesters demanding troops come home gathered near Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi's office hours before Vice President Dick Cheney arrived to start of a
three-nation Asian tour.
"Our will is being
tested in Iraq as we have seen in the heavy fighting this week," Cheney said en
route to Tokyo. "It is absolutely essential that we finish the task at
hand."
Koizumi, facing his toughest test, has
vowed not to pull out the troops, but some analysts say mishandling the crisis
could bring down his government.
Relatives of
the hostages said they were worried by the apparent lack of progress and
shortage of information.
"I assume that there have been advances, but without the
release of information we really don't know what's going on," said Takashi Imai,
father of hostage Noriaki Imai, an 18-year-old who graduated from high school
just last month.
NOT CAVING IN
The three are Imai, who had planned to
look into the effects of depleted uranium weapons; female aid worker Nahoko
Takato, 34; and freelance reporter Soichiro Koriyama, 32.
The public was sharply divided over the decision to
deploy some 1,000 troops to Iraq and nearby countries in Japan's riskiest
military operation since World War II.
Critics
say the deployment violates Japan's pacifist constitution and resent what they
see as U.S. pressure to make the decision. Supporters say it is time for Japan
to take a bolder role in global security.
A
survey by Kyodo news agency found that 45.2 percent of respondents opposed the
decision to keep the troops in Iraq and 43.5 percent supported it.
The precise deadline set by the kidnappers was not
clear, but a Japanese ruling coalition official put it at around 9:00 p.m. (1200
GMT) on Sunday. Enditem
(China Daily/Agencies) |