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こういう画像と記事で紹介されているからもう心配はいらない。むしろ警戒すべきは"救出"と言う名目の虐殺作戦。【油断禁物】
くれぐれも頭に入れ、押さえておくべきポイント。
・3人は、ブッシュや小泉ポチ犬のお友達ではなく、イラクの人々の友である。
・3人が無事帰ってきて、ムスリムが血の通った、そして理の通る人々との印象が広まることは、ブッシュや小泉ポチ犬にとって都合が悪い。
・ブッシュや小泉ポチ犬にとってムスリムは冷酷非情なテロリストでなければならず、3人が無事帰ってきて色々しゃべられては困る。
・ブッシュや小泉ポチ犬にとって、3人はむしろ邪魔な存在である。
以上である。
屁理屈と、情報操作で"救出"と言う名目の虐殺作戦が敢行されないように監視が必要である。
No word on fate of Japanese hostages
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/207639E9-60F6-4A9A-B75D-9947357CFD94.htm
Monday 12 April 2004, 1:31 Makka Time, 22:31 GMT
Nahoko Tokato, an aid worker, was trying to help Iraqi children
高遠菜穂子、救援活動家、はイラクの子供たちに援助の手を差し伸べていた。
Related:
Japan's plea: Don't kill the hostages
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The lives of three Japanese hostages in Iraq are still in jeopardy, with their captors threatening to start killing them unless Japan withdraws its forces.
A presumed American citizen, a Canadian aid worker and a group of 30 foreigners have been reportedly kidnapped in Iraq in recent days.
Germany said that two of its missing nationals were probably dead.
One Briton and a group of Asian drivers were released on Sunday.
Within hours of their release China's official media reported that seven Chinese citizens were kidnapped by armed men in central Iraq on Sunday.
The Xinhua news agency quoted a Chinese diplomat in Baghdad as saying the group entered Iraq via Jordan early on Sunday and were most probably abducted in the flashpoint city of Falluja, west of Baghdad.
Chinese officials were not immediately available for comment.
China, a permanent member of the UN Security Council, resolutely opposed the invasion of Iraq and has refused to send troops to help police the US-led occupation.
Planes on standby
Japan has put three C-130 transport planes on standby in Kuwait so it could use them to airlift three Japanese civilians kidnapped in Iraq, a Japanese Defence Ministry source said on Monday.
"We are putting on stand-by three C-130 transport planes that are in Kuwait now," a Defence Ministry source said.
He said the Japanese air force planes could be used to evacuate the three Japanese hostages as well as other Japanese nationals who would need the government's help to flee the war-torn country.
Japan was stunned and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi was confronted with the biggest test of his political career when a previously unknown Iraqi group released a video on Thursday showing the three, blindfolded and with a gun to their heads
A self-described "Iraqi mediator" Mazhar al-Dalaimi, said on Sunday the kidnappers are "giving the Japanese government a 24-hour ultimatum, not open to extension, after which they will execute a first hostage.
Al-Dalaimi, who claimed to head the League for the Defense of Iraqis' Rights, said "the death sentence will be applied to the others 12 hours later" unless Tokyo meets a number of conditions, chiefly to pull its troops out of Iraq.
Sources in Iraq, however, have questioned the veracity of the claims, and the whereabouts and fate of the hostages remain unclear.
On Thursday Aljazeera television aired a videotape showing the three Japanese sitting at the feet of their armed captors, members of a previously unknown group called Saraya al-Mujahadin.
'Demands'
The captors' are also demanding that Japanese deputy foreign minister visit Falluja, a city west of Baghdad which US forces this week placed under siege, "to see the massacres and mass graves committed by US forces", said al-Dalaimi.
Koriyama is a former soldier turned photojournalist
郡山は元自衛隊員、その後フォトジャーナリストになった。
The hostage takers want Tokyo "to apologise to the people of Iraq," added al-Dalaimi.
When asked by Aljazeera who asked asked him to mediate and pass on the kidnappers' demands, al-Dalaimi said "the leadership of the resistance".
Humanitarian mission
The hostages are Noriaki Imai, 18, Soichiro Koriyama, 32, and Nahoko Tokato, 34.
Imai graduated from high school last month. He is a member of the Campaign to Abolish Depleted Uranium and travelled to Iraq on 1 April to study the effects of depleted uranium on Iraqi children.
Koriyama is a former soldier turned freelance photojournalist.
Takato, is an aid worker and peace activist. She travelled to Iraq in April 2003, after US and British tanks entered Baghdad.
Imai, 18, planned to study the effects of depleted uranium in Iraq
今井(18歳)はイラクでの劣化ウラン弾汚染の影響を調査しようと計画していた。
The captors had initially threatened to burn the hostages alive if Tokyo did not withdraw its troops from Iraq.
Saraya al-Mujahadin sent a fax to Aljazeera saying it would release all three hostages by 00:00GMT (3:00am), adding they were all in good health.
Earlier, the group said it was releasing the hostages after the Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS)-the highest Sunni Muslim authority in Iraq-called for the captives release.
Islamic leader's calls
AMS spokesman Muhammad Bashar al-Fiyad reiterated calls for the hostages to be freed after the deadline for their release passed on Sunday.
Al-Fiyad also urged the kidnappers to stick to their promise to release the civilians. He called on all kidnappers in Iraq to release their hostages, in an interview with Aljazeera television. In recent days there have been a spate of kidnappings targeting foreigners, mainly humanitarian workers.
Meanwhile, the hostages' families handed the government a
petition with what they said were 150,000 signatures, urging
it to withdraw Japanese troops if it would help.
Aljazeera + Agencies