The family and colleagues of Alan Johnston, a BBC reporter
kidnapped by Islamists in Gaza, urged his captors yesterday not to
harm him after he appeared in a video wearing what he said was an
explosives belt.
Johnston's father said he and his family were "most concerned
and distressed" about the video, in which the 45-year-old Briton
said his kidnappers had threatened to blow up the belt of
explosives if force was used to free him.
The BBC also said it was "very distressing" to see Johnston
"being threatened in this way".
"Our thoughts, of course, are with Alan in his present
predicament. We earnestly request his abductors to release Alan
unharmed in any way," Johnston's father said in a statement.
In the one-minute-long video posted by the Army of Islam on a
website used by militants, Johnston looked tired but unharmed and
appealed to the Hamas movement and the British government "not to
resort to tactics of force in an effort to end this".
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum said in Gaza, where the movement
took control in a civil war more than a week ago, that contacts
were under way with Johnston's captors to gain his release through
peaceful means.
"We will work in every way to free Alan Johnston without putting
his life at risk," Barhoum said. "Preserving Alan's life and
freedom is better than shedding blood and maybe that will cost us
more time."
Johnston appeared in the video wearing a white and blue belt
around his torso with black shoulder straps over a dark red sweater
in the undated video filmed against a black background.
Johnston's captors say they want Britain to free Muslim
prisoners, particularly Islamist cleric Abu Qatada, in exchange for
the reporter's release.
Hamas officials in the Gaza Strip say they are pressing the
kidnappers to free Johnston, but Ismail Haniyeh, the prime minister
of the Hamas-led government sacked by Palestinian President Mahmoud
Abbas of Fatah, said on Sunday his group had not used force to try
to free Johnston at the request of the British government, fearing
he might be harmed in the process.
"We ask those holding Alan to avoid him being harmed by
releasing him immediately," the BBC said in a statement.
Johnston was abducted in Gaza on March 12 and is believed to be
being held by the Army of Islam.
(China Daily via agencies June 26, 2007)