Families of a Japanese journalist and Jordanian military
pilot remained in limbo Friday, a day after the latest purported deadline for a
possible prisoner swap passed with no further word from the Islamic State group
holding them captive.
Japanese officials had no progress to report after a late
night that ended with the Jordanian government saying it would only release an al-Qaeda
prisoner from death row if it got proof the airman was alive.
There is nothing I can tell you,” government spokesman
Yoshihide Suga told reporters. He reiterated Japan’s “strong trust” in the
Jordanians to help save the Japanese hostage, freelance journalist Kenji Goto.
Suga said the government had been in close contact with
Goto’s wife, Rinko Jogo, who released a statement overnight pleading for her
husband’s life.
“I fear that this is the last chance for my husband, and we
now have only a few hours left,” Jogo said in a statement released through the
Rory Peck Trust, a London-based organization for freelance journalists.
An audio message purportedly posted online by jihadis said
the pilot, Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh, would be killed if Sajida al-Rishawi, the
al-Qaeda prisoner, was not delivered to the Turkish border by sunset on
Thursday, Iraq time. It was not clear from the recording what would happen to
Goto if the Iraqi woman was not returned by the deadline.
The authenticity of the recording could not be verified
independently by the AP. But the possibility of a swap was raised Wednesday
when Jordan said it was willing to trade al-Rishawi for the pilot.
After sundown in the Middle East, with no news on the fate
of either the pilot or Goto, the families’ agonizing wait dragged on.
Goto’s wife said she had avoided public comment until the
last minute to try to protect her daughters, an infant and a 2-year-old, from
media attention.
Late Thursday, Goto’s wife revealed that she had exchanged
several emails with her husband’s captors, and that in the past 20 hours she
had received one appearing to be their final demand.
She urged the Japanese and Jordanian governments to finalize
a swap that would free both hostages. “I beg the Jordanian and Japanese governments
to understand that the fates of both men are in their hands,” she said.
In the Jordanian capital, Amman, the pilot’s brother Jawdat
al-Kaseasbeh said his family had “no clue” about where the negotiations stood.
“We received no assurances from anyone that he is alive,” he
told The Associated Press. “We are waiting, just waiting.”
On Thursday afternoon, Jordan’s government spokesman,
Mohammed al-Momani, signalled that since the hostage-takers had not delivered
any proof the pilot is still alive.
Al-Rishawi, 44, faces death by hanging for her role in a
suicide bombing, one of three simultaneous attacks on Amman hotels in November
2005 that killed 60 people. She survived because her belt of explosives didn’t
detonate. She initially confessed, but later recanted, saying she was an
unwilling participant.
She is from the Iraqi city of Ramadi and has close family
ties to the Iraqi branch of al-Qaeda, a precursor of the Islamic State group.
Three of her brothers were al-Qaeda operatives killed in fighting in Iraq.
Jordan faces tough choices in the hostage drama.
Releasing al-Rishawi, implicated in the worst terror attack
in Jordan, would be at odds with the government’s tough stance on Islamic
extremism.
However, King Abdullah II faces public pressure to bring home
the pilot, who was captured in December after his Jordanian F-16 crashed near
the Islamic State group’s de facto capital of Raqqa in Syria. He is the first
foreign military pilot to be captured since the U.S. and its allies began
airstrikes against the Islamic State more than four months ago.
Jordan’s participation in the U.S.-led airstrikes is
unpopular in the kingdom, and the pilot is seen by some as the victim of a war
they feel the country shouldn’t be involved in.
Al-Kaseasbeh’s relatives have expressed such views and
accused the government of bungling efforts to win his freedom.
“They abandoned Muath, the son of the army!” chanted
protesters gathered at a “diwan,” or meeting place, in Amman for tribesmen from
Karak, in southern Jordan.
The hostage drama began last week after the Islamic State
group released a video showing Goto and another Japanese hostage, Haruna Yukawa
kneeling in orange jumpsuits beside a masked man who threatened to kill them in
72 hours unless Japan paid a $200-million ransom. That demand has since
apparently shifted to one for the release of al-Rishawi.
The militants have reportedly killed Yukawa, 42, although
that has not been confirmed.
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