Arab Times

Japanese hostage appealing for help

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TOKYO, May 30, (RTRS): The Japanese government said on Monday it was doing all it could to secure the release of a Japanese journalist being held hostage by an alQaeda affiliate in Syria, after an apparent photograph of the man was posted on the internet.

The photograph, apparently uploaded to the Internet late on Sunday, showed a bearded man dressed in orange holding a hand-written sign in Japanese.

“Please help me. This is my last chance,” said the sign, written in shaky characters and signed “Jumpei Yasuda.”

Yasuda’s plight came to attention in

March, when a video surfaced showing him reading a message to his country and his family. Japanese media said he was capture by a group called Nusra Front after entering Syria from Turkey last June.

Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said the government was analysing the new photo and believed it was Yasuda, while Chief Cabinet Spokesman Yoshihide Suga said the government was doing what it could.

“Since preserving the safety of Japanese citizens is our most important duty, we are making use of a broad net of informatio­n and doing everything we can to respond,” Suga told a news conference.

Asked if this meant contacting the Nusra Front, Suga said “that sort of thing was included” but declined to give further details.

Early in 2015, the Islamic State militant group beheaded two Japanese nationals — a self-styled security consultant and a veteran war reporter. The gruesome executions captured the attention of Japan but the government said at the time it would not negotiate with the militants for their release.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This undated picture provided by Japan’s Jiji Press news agency, taken at an undisclose­d location, on May 30, shows Japanese freelance journalist Jumpei Yasuda holding a piece of paper with a handwritte­n message in Japanese.
(AFP) This undated picture provided by Japan’s Jiji Press news agency, taken at an undisclose­d location, on May 30, shows Japanese freelance journalist Jumpei Yasuda holding a piece of paper with a handwritte­n message in Japanese.

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