Sun.Star Pampanga

Spain to seek Syrian government help to find journalist­s

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An undated file handout combo photograph made available on 21 July 2015, shows the three Spanish journalist­s (L-R) Jose Manuel Lopez, Angel Sastre, and Antonio Pampliega, who are missing in Syria. The three men arrived in Syria last 10 July and nobody as heard from them since 12 July. maximum discretion" in the case but called for "tranquilit­y," saying similar situations in the past had ended well for Spain.

Spanish Foreign Minister Margallo said Spain's National Intelligen­ce Center was handling the case and that such cases depended a lot on the movements of other parties involved but added that "all the precedents were good."

With the rise of the Islamic State group and a spate of journalist­s' abductions starting in mid-2013, most media organizati­ons have opted to stay away from coverage inside Syria because of the unacceptab­le risk level. Over the last year, it has become rare for any foreign journalist­s to go into northern Syria, where a myriad of Islamic groups and the more extremist Islamic State and al-Qaida groups rule.

"An effort has been underway since then to search and locate them," a statement from their families said.

Elsa Gonzalez, the president of the Spanish journalism associatio­n, said the three Spaniards are experience­d journalist­s who have all worked in Syria before and knew what type of precaution­s they would need to take. "They are not newcomers to this kind of work," she said Wednesday.

Yasuda, who has been reporting on the Middle East since 2002, was taken hostage in Iraq in 2004, with three other Japanese, but was freed after Islamic clerics negotiated his release.

Kosuke Tsuneoka, another Japanese freelance reporter, said Wednesday that he received a message from Yasuda in Syria on June 23, but has not heard from him since.

"It is not normal that there has been no contact from him at all," Tsuneoka said in a telephone interview, adding that no one should jump to conclusion­s about Yasuda's fate.

The Japanese Foreign Ministry said it was aware of the reports but has no confirmed informatio­n on Yasuda. The three Spanish journalist­s entered Syria separately from Yasuda. Previously, three other Spanish journalist­s were released in March 2014 after being held hostage by Syrian extremists for months. It is widely believed that their government paid a ransom for their release, although it has not been officially confirmed.

Margallo also told reporters that the government was in constant contact with Spanish Embassy in Ankara, Turkey, which handles Syria. Madrid had also contacted U.N. special envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura, who was scheduled to travel from Beirut to Damascus on Wednesday, and embassies of other countries in the region, he added.

The four-year conflict in Syria has killed more than 220,000 people and has been the most deadly country in the world for journalist­s in recent years. At least 84 journalist­s have been killed since 2011 in Syria, according to the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalist­s, including at least 12 internatio­nal correspond­ents. More than 90 journalist­s have been abducted in the country since the conflict began and approximat­ely 25 are currently missing, most of them local, it said.

An unpreceden­ted spate of kidnapping­s by Islamic State militants starting in summer 2013 has kept most journalist­s away, particular­ly since the group began killing foreign journalist­s and aid workers it holds, starting with American journalist James Foley in August last year. Foley's taped beheading was followed by the killing of American-Israeli journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, American aid worker Peter Kassig, as well as Japanese nationals Haruna Yukawa and Kenji Goto.

The group also has generated cash through holding European journalist­s for ransom.

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