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Bloomberg Business: Islamic State to Make Statement on Japan Hostages

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(Bloomberg) — Islamic State will release a statement “soon” on two Japanese hostages it has threatened to kill sometime on Friday if Japan doesn’t pay a $200 million ransom, Japan’s public broadcaster NHK reported.
The Japanese people are infidels at war with Islamic State, a spokesman for the group said on an Internet call with NHK. When asked about negotiations with the Japanese government for the release of the two men, the spokesman said it wasn’t a good question, NHK reported.
The deadline for Japan to respond to Islamic State’s ransom demand is fast approaching, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga saying Japan considers it to be Friday at 2:50 p.m. Tokyo time. The government was doing everything it could do to save the men, but had failed to contact Islamic State, Suga said Thursday.
The hostage crisis risks undermining Abe’s push for Japan to play a bigger role in world affairs and further erode support for his effort to ease pacifist constraints in the country’s constitution to broaden the role for the nation’s military. Opinion polls show a majority of Japanese are opposed to bolstering the military, even as China becomes more assertive in a territorial dispute with Japan.
Islamic State made its threat in a video released Jan. 20 showing a knife-wielding masked militant between the two kneeling men threatening to kill them within 72 hours unless Japan pays the ransom — the same amount that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged in aid this week to nations fighting Islamic State during a six-day Middle East trip.

No Payment

Abe told U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron by phone on Thursday that he stood by his country’s commitment not to pay ransoms, according to Cameron’s spokeswoman Helen Bower. Group of Eight leaders pledged in 2013 not to pay terrorists to free hostages.
Even so, Abe vowed this week to use “all means necessary” to free the men — self-styled security contractor Haruna Yukawa and war correspondent Kenji Goto — even as he said Japan would never cave into terrorism. Japan has reached out for international assistance, and has set up an emergency headquarters in Amman, Jordan.
Yukawa, 42, went to the Middle East last year as he sought to reinvent himself as a soldier-of-fortune after a failed business career, a suicide attempt and the death of his wife, he wrote on his personal blog in April.

Captured in Syria

His new career as self-styled security contractor led him in July to Syria, where he was captured by Islamic State, prompting Goto, a devout Christian and acquaintance of Yukawa, to head to the northern Syrian city of Aleppo seeking his release, according to Kyodo news agency.
Goto, born in 1967, ended up himself a hostage facing the same death sentence, after leaving a video message in which he said his fate was his own responsibility.
Goto’s mother, Junko Ishido, issued a statement to reporters in Tokyo on Friday pleading for the Japanese government to save her son’s life, adding that Japan is not an enemy of Islamic countries.
“For the past three days I have been able to do nothing but cry with sorrow,” Ishido wrote. “Kenji always said he wanted to save the lives of children in war zones. He reported from wars from a neutral perspective.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Isabel Reynolds in Tokyo at ireynolds1@bloomberg.net To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Davis at abdavis@bloomberg.net

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Men of Value Contributor

Men of Value Contributor

Articles by various contributors to Men of Value, an online magazine for American men who value our Judeo-Christian values of faith, family, and freedom.

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