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2 More Japanese Reportedly Kidnapped in Iraq

Two more Japanese civilians have been kidnapped in Iraq in addition to three taken hostage by militants last week, Japanese media said on Thursday, as the hostage crisis dragged on with little sign of resolution.  

A Japanese Foreign Ministry spokesman said the government was still trying to confirm the media reports, which said a Japanese non-governmental organization had received an e-mail saying two Japanese had been kidnapped near Baghdad.

 

The two were tentatively identified by Kyodo News Agency as freelance journalists Jumpei Yasuda and Nobutaka Watanabe.

 

An Iraqi militant group took three Japanese civilians hostage last week and threatened to kill them if Japan did not withdraw its troops from Iraq.

 

Although the group later said the hostages would be released, their fate remains unknown.

 

Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has vowed not to pull out some 550 Japanese soldiers taking part in a non-combat mission in southern Iraq.

 

Analysts say his handling of the situation could affect the showing of his ruling coalition in Lower House by-elections later this month and a poll for parliament's Upper House in July.

 

The outcome is also certain to affect debate over what role Japan -- now testing the limits of its pacifist constitution -- should play in global security matters.

 

The three Japanese taken hostage last week are Noriaki Imai, 18, who wanted to look into the effects of depleted uranium weapons, freelance journalist Soichiro Koriyama, 32, and aid worker Nahoko Takato, 34.

 

Up to 40 foreigners from at least a dozen countries are being held hostage in Iraq, where US forces are locked in some of the fiercest fighting with Sunni and Shi'ite forces since the fall of Saddam Hussein a year ago.

 

Italy said on Thursday that one of four captive Italians had been killed, but Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was quoted by Italian state TV as saying the killing would have no impact on Rome's refusal to withdraw from the US-led force in Iraq.

 

Japan's public is deeply divided over the dispatch of troops to southern Iraq, where they carrying out reconstruction work.

 

The deployment is Tokyo's riskiest military mission since World War II and a major step away from a purely defensive military posture.

 

(China Daily April 15, 2004)

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