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Japan attempts to verify Isis hostage ‘beheading video’ Japan attempts to verify Isis hostage ‘beheading video’
(about 1 hour later)
​The Japanese government is seeking to verify a video that suggests one of the two Japanese hostages kidnapped by Islamic State has been killed. There were fears on Saturday for the life of Haruna Yukawa, one of two Japanese men taken hostage by Islamic State, after the release of a recording claiming he had been beheaded and a photograph purporting to show his body.
In the video there is an audio recording of a man speaking in English, who says he is hostage Kenji Goto, over the top of a still image apparently showing him holding a photograph of the body of fellow hostage Haruna Yukawa. In the brief tape, a man claiming to be the surviving hostage, 47-year-old journalist Kenji Goto, says his “cellmate” is dead and pleads for his own life. Speaking in English with a Japanese accent, he says Isis has dropped its demand for a $100m ransom and instead now wants to organise a prisoner exchange for a woman held in Jordan. The still image released with the tape shows Goto apparently holding a picture of Yukawa’s body.
The speaker claims that Yukawa had been executed and that the militants would release Goto in exchange for the release of a prisoner, Sajida Rishawi, an Iraqi held in Jordan who has been linked with al-Qaida. However, the video was quickly deleted, and one militant writing on a website affiliated with Isis warned that the new message was fake. Another said that the message was intended only to go to Goto’s family.
However, the post was quickly deleted and one militant writing on a website affiliated with Isis warned that the new message was fake. Another said that the message was intended only to go to Goto’s family. The Japanese government said it was investigating the recording, which is quite different in format from the string of videos Isis has produced to show the murders of other foreign hostages.
A third militant noted that the video was not issued by al-Furqan, which is one of the media arms of Isis and has issued past videos involving hostages and beheadings. The new message did not bear al-Furqan’s logo. Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, told Associated Press that cabinet ministers were holding an emergency meeting. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that the release of the new message was “an outrageous and unforgivable act. We demand their immediate release.”
The White House said on Saturday that the US intelligence community was also working to confirm the authenticity of the recording. A national security council spokesman said: “The United States strongly condemns Isil’s [Isis’s] actions and we call for the immediate release of all the remaining hostages. The prisoner Isis wants released is Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi woman who was sent on an al-Qaida bombing mission to Jordan in 2005 with her husband. They targeted a wedding in a hotel, and he killed at least 57 people, but she was caught after her suicide belt failed to detonate.
“The United States is fully supportive of Japan in this matter. We stand in solidarity with Japan and are coordinating closely.” Japan’s deputy foreign minister, Yasuhide Nakayama, is in Jordan to try to coordinate rescue efforts. He was sent soon after the first video of the hostages surfaced, but in the hours before an arbitrary deadline for the ransom payment, Japanese officials admitted that they had not been able to reach Isis.
Previously Isis has posted rolling video of a hostage being killed to announce a death. Yukawa, 42, from Chiba prefecture near Tokyo, went to Syria last year after a series of personal misfortunes. Goto is a respected author and freelance journalist who ran a small media company, and went to cover the Syrian conflict.
Japan’s chief cabinet secretary, Yoshihide Suga, said ministers would meet to discuss the situation as the government gathered information. On Tuesday the two men appeared together in a video released by Isis’s al-Furqan media outlet entitled “A message to the government at the people of Japan”. It set a 72-hour deadline for the Japanese government to pay a $200m ransom, $100m for each hostage. Its format was similar to previous hostage videos, with the men in orange jumpsuits kneeling on a hillside in a rocky desert, while a British-sounding militant standing between them issued demands. Saturday’s video message, however, did not bear al-Furqan’s logo.
The prime minister, Shinzo Abe, said the release of the message was “an outrageous and unforgivable act” and demanded the immediate release of the hostages. He later added that the government would spare no effort to secure Goto’s release and that it would not give in to terrorism. Yukawa was originally detained in April in northern Syria by anti-government militant group the Free Syrian Army, and Goto, who was in the area, was brought as an interpreter for the group to interrogate him. He was captured again some time after 21 July, when his blog entries stopped. In August, Isis released a YouTube video showing him with a bleeding face and lying on the ground, identifying himself as Japanese and not a spy.
Isis had demanded $200m (£133m) from the Japanese government to release the two men. Goto is understood to have left Japan for Syria in early October, arriving there some time around 22 October. There has been speculation that he may have travelled to come to the aid of Yukawa.
Yukawa, from Chiba prefecture near Tokyo, went to Syria to fight with rebels last year after a series of personal misfortunes. This is not the first time Japan has faced a hostage crises from Islamic militants. In 2004, followers of Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq beheaded a 24-year-old backpacker, Shosei Koda. A video by al-Zarqawi’s group, which later became the Islamic State group, showed Koda begging Japan’s then prime minister to save him.
Goto is a respected author and freelance journalist who runs a small media company, and went to cover the Syrian conflict. At the time, prime minister Junichiro Koizumi told reporters: “I cannot allow terrorism and cannot bow to terrorism.” Koda’s body was found a few days later dumped in Baghdad.
On Tuesday the two men appeared together in a 1 min 40 sec video released by Isis’s al-Furqan media outlet, entitled “A message to the government at the people of Japan”, which set a 72-hour deadline for the Japanese government to pay the ransom. The White House said in a statement that the US intelligence community was also working to confirm the authenticity of the recording. Patrick Ventrell, deputy spokesperson for the American National Security Council, said: “We have seen the video purporting to show that Japanese citizen Haruna Yukawa has been murdered by the terrorist group Isil. The intelligence community is working to confirm its authenticity.
Standing between each hostage while they knelt on a hillside in a rocky desert, a British-sounding militant demanded $200m for both hostages, equating the value to that which, the militant said, Japan had given “to destroy the homes of the Muslims”. “The United States strongly condemns Isil’s actions and we call for the immediate release of all the remaining hostages. The United States is fully supportive of Japan in this matter. We stand in solidarity with Japan and are coordinating closely.”
The Japanese government has stated that its multimillion-dollar aid package announced last week during a week-long government tour of the Middle East had been ring-fenced for humanitarian purposes only.