Home>News Center>World
         
 

Threat on US journalist is said lifted
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-08-22 17:23

Kidnappers have lifted their threat to kill a U.S. journalist abducted in the southern city of Nasiriyah along with his Iraqi translator, an aide to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said Saturday.

The kidnappers, calling themselves the Martyrs Brigade, threatened Thursday to kill Micah Garen of New York within 48 hours if U.S. troops did not leave Najaf, according to a video aired on the Arab-language television station Al-Jazeera.

Garen and his Iraqi translator, Amir Doushi, were walking through a market in Nasiriyah on Aug. 13 when two armed men in civilian clothes seized them, police said, citing witnesses.

Al-Sadr aide Sheik Awas al-Khafaji said Saturday he had spoken to mediators who said the death threat had been lifted and they were working out a way to have Garen released.

"We hope that he will be released today and our efforts would be fruitful," he said Saturday by telephone from Nasiriyah. "As for the Iraqi translator, we have received assurances that he is going to be released with the journalist."

It was not possible to independently verify the claim.

Garen appeared in another video aired Friday on Al-Jazeera saying his captors were treating him well. "I am an American journalist in Iraq and I've been asked to deliver a message," he said. "I am in captivity and being treated well."

The newsreader said that Garen also had called for an end to the killing in Najaf, where U.S. and Iraqi forces have been fighting a radical Shiite militia for two weeks, though that part of the audio was inaudible.

Garen was working on a story about the looting of archaeological sites in Iraq when he was abducted, said his fiancee, Marie-Helene Carleton.

Garen worked for Four Corners media, identified on its Web site as a "documentary organization working in still photography, video and print media."

He has taken photographs as a stringer for The Associated Press and had a story published in The New York Times. His photographs also have appeared in U.S. News & World Report.

Scores of foreigners have been kidnapped in recent months by insurgents and criminal gangs seeking to extort ransom or with the political motive of trying to force foreign troops and companies to leave the country.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi interpreter of an Italian journalist who is missing and feared kidnapped was found dead, a news report said Saturday.

Enzo Baldoni, who went to Iraq freelancing for the news magazine Diario, has been considered missing since Friday, when the Foreign Ministry announced he had not checked in with Italian officials in Iraq, as is customary. His last reported contact was Thursday, when he was traveling to the southern city of Najaf.

Diario's editor in chief, Enrico Deaglio, told the ANSA news agency Saturday that Baldoni's interpreter's corpse "was found near Najaf and his body was brought to Baghdad. Still no news of Baldoni, but one increasingly fears a kidnapping."

The Italian Red Cross, which is working in Iraq, said Saturday that Shiite sources in the country had also told them Baldoni's interpreter was dead.

"None of us have seen the corpse," Italian Red Cross spokesman Fabrizio Centofanti stressed. But "they said he was killed by gunfire."

The Italian Foreign Ministry said late Saturday it was still looking into the matter.

Italian reports described Baldoni as a 56-year-old who worked in advertising and liked to visit war zones in his free time, selling occasional articles. Baldoni, who had not been to Iraq before this trip, also wrote entries about his travels on a Web blog.

The family of Turkish hostage Aytullah Gezmen, meanwhile, said Saturday they still had no word about his fate, despite the withdrawal of two Turkish companies withdrew from Iraq in a bid to save his life.

A Turkish television channel on Thursday broadcast a video of Gezmen and said the kidnappers threatened to kill him if the companies didn't leave Iraq within three days.

"The company has done everything necessary. They said they were leaving Iraq. But we still haven't received any news," Ethem Gezmen, Aytullah's older brother, said by telephone from the family's home in southern Turkish city of Iskenderun.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

China gain 4 more golds, back to top spot

 

   
 

Grand meeting hails Deng's centenary

 

   
 

Experts urge government to levy fuel tax

 

   
 

Web portals facing tighter supervision

 

   
 

Blasts, gunfire shake Najaf as talks drag

 

   
 

Beijing subway lines set for 2008 completions

 

   
  Arabs say US destroys hope over Jewish settlements
   
  Blasts, gunfire shake Najaf as talks drag
   
  Threat on US journalist is said lifted
   
  Militants hold Najaf shrine; bombing heard
   
  Two French journalists missing in Iraq
   
  Pakistan foils terror plots, arrests 10
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  American "democracy" under the microscope...  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 成年女人免费碰碰视频| 久久久久久国产精品视频 | 一级毛片视频免费| baby直播看片下载| 一区二区三区影院| 色综合蜜桃视频在线观看| 男男性彩漫漫画无遮挡| 欧美三级不卡在线观看视频| 无翼乌无遮挡h肉挤奶百合| 夜夜爽夜夜叫夜夜高潮漏水 | 在线观看人成视频免费| 国产成人精品电影| 动漫美女被到爽流触手 | 免费黄网站在线看| 亚洲国产一区二区三区| 中文字幕无线码一区二区| 97青青草原国产免费观看| 青娱乐精品在线| 毛片免费在线视频| 日本动漫黄观看免费网站| 国内精品在线视频| 国产主播福利在线观看| 亚洲第一成年网站大全亚洲| 久久久国产99久久国产久| 99在线精品免费视频九九视| 青青青视频免费| 毛片免费观看的视频| 把美女日出白浆| 国产精品国产三级国产AV′| 嘟嘟嘟www在线观看免费高清| 亚洲国产精品成人久久久| 三年片免费观看大全国语| 亚洲国产香蕉视频欧美| 男女免费观看在线爽爽爽视频| 日本高清护士xxxxx| 国产精选之刘婷野战| 免费无码AV一区二区| 亚洲伊人久久精品影院| 北岛玲日韩精品一区二区三区| 免费的一级毛片| 亚洲综合在线观看视频|