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Iraq Group Holding Britons Demands UK Withdrawal

Reuters
Dec 04, 2007

A frame-grab from a video broadcast  Al-Arabiya news channel shows an alleged hostage flanked by two masked gunmen in front of a banner reading 'the Shiite Islamic Resistance in Iraq'. (AFP/Getty Images)
A frame-grab from a video broadcast Al-Arabiya news channel shows an alleged hostage flanked by two masked gunmen in front of a banner reading 'the Shiite Islamic Resistance in Iraq'. (AFP/Getty Images)

DUBAI—Kidnappers holding five Britons in Iraq since May threatened in a video on Tuesday to kill one hostage in 10 days unless Britain withdrew from Iraq.

The video, dated Nov. 18 and aired by Al Arabiya television, showed a hostage sitting on the floor flanked by masked gunmen pointing assault rifles at him.

"My name is Jason. Today is November 18. I have been here now 173 days and I feel we've been forgotten," said the bearded hostage on the video as he sat in front of a banner of the Shi'ite Islamic Resistance in Iraq.

A statement said that if Britain failed to leave Iraq within 10 days after it was broadcast "this hostage will be killed as a first warning, which would be followed with details that you would not want to know".

Britain has not disclosed the names of the five Britons—a computer consultant and his four bodyguards—who were snatched from a Finance Ministry data processing centre by gunmen wearing police commando uniforms in May.

"They (hostages) have confessed and given details of plans in which they came to loot our wealth under the fake cover of being consultants at the Finance Ministry. We will show details of their confessions later," the group said on the video.

Britain condemned the video.

"No matter what the cause, hostage-taking can never be justified. We again call on those holding the men to release them unconditionally," a spokesman said in London.

"We condemn the publication of this video which serves only to add to the distress of the men's family and friends."

Iraqi officials have said they suspect Mehdi Army militiamen loyal to Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr of carrying out the kidnapping, possibly in retaliation for the killing of a militia leader in southern Iraq by British-backed Iraqi special forces.

Rogue Elements

A U.S. military official said in September that rogue elements of the Mehdi Army were behind the abductions.

An official at the Dubai-based satellite television channel said Arabiya received an anonymous call giving the location where the tape could be found.

A British embassy spokesman in Baghdad said it was unclear if the video broadcast was the complete tape.

"Until we have established this first, we cannot comment any further," he said.

Nabil al-Khateeb, head of news at Arabiya, said only "newsworthy" parts of the tape were aired and the British government had asked to see the video. "They asked but we didn't decide on that yet," he told Reuters.

Most kidnappings of Western hostages carried out in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion have been carried out by Sunni insurgents groups, including al Qaeda.



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