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British hostage in Iraq renews plea for life
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-09-30 07:56

A weeping British hostage was shown pleading for help between the bars of a makeshift cage in a video that surfaced Wednesday, a sobering reminder of the grim reality for at least 18 foreign captives still held by Iraqi militants.


A grab taken from a video tape broadcast by Al-Jazeera television September 29, 2004, shows British hostage Kenneth Bigley inside a metal cage at an unknown location. Bigley appeared in a video tape aired on Wednesday, squatting in a metal cage, chained and dressed in an orange jumpsuit, pleading with Prime Minister Tony Blair to meet the demands of his captors in Iraq to release Iraqi women prisoners. Bigley said his captors, a group led by al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, did not want to kill him and accused Blair of ignoring his plight and "lying", the channel said. [Reuters]
There is wide speculation that ransoms were paid for the freedom of a dozen hostages, including two Italian aid workers.

The new footage, first broadcast on the Arab news network Al-Jazeera and then posted on the Internet, showed Kenneth Bigley begging British Prime Minister Tony Blair to meet his captors' demands.

"Tony Blair, I am begging you for my life," the 62-year-old Bigley said between sobs. "Have some compassion. Only you can help me now."

He accused Blair of lying about efforts to secure his release, saying no negotiations were taking place.

"My life is cheap. He doesn't care about me. I am just one person," the civil engineer said. "I want to go home. Please, Mr. Blair, don't leave me here."

It was the second tape in a week to surface showing Bigley appealing for help. Iraq's most feared terror group, Tawhid and Jihad, beheaded two American hostages seized with Bigley and warned he will be the next to die unless Iraqi women prisoners are freed.

blair,hostage,bigley,iraq
Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair looks down as he attends a Muslim Council of Britain meeting on the fringes of his Labour Party's annual conference in Brighton, September 29, 2004. Blair said on Wednesday Britain would respond to the captors of Kenneth Bigley being held in Iraq if they made contact with his government. Bigley, made an impassioned plea to Blair to help free him in a videotape aired on Wednesday that left relatives relieved to see him alive but appalled at his caged conditions. [Reuters]
Gruesome videotapes of the killings were posted on the Internet, and the men's decapitated bodies were found in Baghdad — not far from the upscale neighborhood where they were seized from their house Sept. 16.

In the latest tape, Bigley sat hunched on the floor of a cage, his hands and legs in chains. He was dressed in an orange jumpsuit, similar to those worn by Americans Eugene Armstrong and Jack Hensley when they were slain. The leader of Tawhid and Jihad, Jordanian terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, personally beheaded Armstrong.

Asked to respond to Bigley's plea, Blair said Wednesday evening, "I feel absolutely sick about what has happened and I feel desperately sorry not just for Ken Bigley, obviously, but for the whole of his family."

He said the government was doing everything it could to help Bigley and would respond if his captors initiated contact, but had no way to reach them.

Bigley's brother, Paul, told the British Broadcasting Corp. that the images of his brother chained and caged were "absolutely appalling, there's no other word for it, heart wrenching." But he said he was pleased to see his brother alive.

"That's the good news I see through the smoke," he said. "This is a last ditch attempt, something has to be done and something has to be done very quickly."

More than 140 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq and at least 26 have been killed. Some, like Bigley, were seized by insurgents as leverage in their campaign against the United States and its allies. But others were taken by criminals seeking ransom.

"This kind of thing creates a broader contagion for people suffering for other reasons under the occupation," said Jonathan Stevenson, senior fellow for counterterrorism with the International Institute for Strategic Studies in Washington. "They get the idea that they can earn some extra cash by kidnapping people."

Stevenson said al-Zarqawi and his followers probably realize they can't drive the United States and Britain out of Iraq. But militants hope that by taking hostages, they can force the release of a few Iraqi prisoners or the pullout of some troops — the Philippines withdrew its 51 soldiers to free a captive — allowing them to declare victory.

The back-to-back releases this week of the two Italian aid workers and four Egyptian communications engineers raised questions about whether ransoms were paid to win their freedom.

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi brushed off the questions, telling La Stampa newspaper: "About this business, we won't say anything. Even more, we won't talk about it any more."

Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini told state-run radio Wednesday that "no ransom at all" was paid.

But an Italian lawmaker said he believed the Italian government paid $1 million for the women's release Tuesday, as reported by a Kuwaiti newspaper.

"The government has denied it, but that's an official denial that comes in the context of the obligations of a government in order not to give the impression that it gave in to the ransom," Gustavo Selva, head of the Foreign Affairs committee, told French radio station RTL.

Simona Torretta and Simona Pari, both 29, work for the aid group "Un Ponte per..." (A Bridge to ...), which carries out water projects and helps Iraqi children. They were kidnapped Sept. 7 from their Baghdad office.

Orascom, parent company of the four Egyptians abducted last week, refused to say whether a ransom was paid for their release Monday and Tuesday. Two other Egyptian engineers are still held.

The releases raised hopes among some for the fate of other hostages, including two French journalists captured with their Syrian driver Aug. 20. But analysts cautioned that with so many groups involved in the kidnappings, it was too soon for optimism.

The beheadings of the Americans prompted a surge of condemnation in the Middle East, and that may have had an effect on al-Zarqawi and other militants, said Dia'a Rashwan, a Cairo-based expert on Islamic militants. But he said "kidnapping will go on. It has proven to be an efficient weapon."

French lawmaker Didier Julia said Wednesday that a man believed to be an unofficial French negotiator, Philippe Brett, had met with the journalists and secured a promise for their release. Julia said the United States had secured a corridor that allowed the release of the Italians, and that the same would have to be done for the French men.

In Baghdad, a U.S. military spokesman said he did not know if the United States had assisted with a corridor. The U.S. Embassy declined comment.

Despite persistent violence, the United States and Iraqi forces say they are inflicting a heavy toll on insurgents blamed for a spate of kidnappings, bombings and other attacks this month.

Iraqi security forces backed by U.S. troops arrested a suspected terrorist on Haifa Street in Baghdad, cornering the panicked man in a closet as he tried to conceal his face with his wife's underwear, an Iraqi National Guard commander said.

Kadhim al-Dafan is believed responsible for car bombs and other attacks in the area, said Col. Mohammed Abdullah. Five other suspected insurgents were also taken into custody as U.S. and Iraqi forces clashed with rebels on the street.

Also Wednesday, four U.S. soldiers were wounded when a homemade bomb went off near Riyadh, northwest of the capital, the U.S. command said. The four were reported in stable condition.



 
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