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Jordan won't free prisoner without proof pilot alive

Jordan won't free prisoner without proof pilot alive
Jordan says won't free Sajida al-Rishawi without proof that the captured pilot is alive and well, as Amman and Tokyo worked frantically to secure the release of their citizens held by extremist IS group.
5 min read
29 January, 2015
Jordanian King Abdullah faces growing domestic pressure to bring the pilot home. [Anadolu]

Jordan said Thursday that it would not release an Iraqi female jihadist until it receives proof that a Jordanian pilot held by the Islamic State group is alive. 

IS has threatened to execute the airman unless Jordan frees Sajida al-Rishawi by sunset Thursday in exchange for Japanese hostage Kenji Goto. 

"Rishawi is still in Jordan and the exchange will happen once we receive the proof of life that we asked for," Jordanian government spokesman Mohammad al-Momani said. 

Meanwhile the Jordanian parliament issued a statement saying that that "we sense bad intent on the part of the IS group", in a sign that Jordan is preparing the public for worse case scenarios. 

Eearlier, former Prime Minister Raouf Rawabdeh told Al Araby Al Jadeed that while he could not reveal details "the Jordanian poeple should remember that all members of the Jordanian army are potential future martyrs."

Rawabdeh has strong connection with Royal Court and the security service; the two parties most likely to be involved in any indirect contacts with the IS group. 

A Jordanian official source suggested that Jordan wanted  to ensure that IS group is seen as responsible should negotiations fail. 

"We want Jordanians to know that we are tryinmg our best and negotiating all the way, but we don't want to be seen as the party that botched the negotiations." 

Japanese officials meanwhile are studying the latest message purportedly the extremist group, which extends the deadline for Jordan’s release of an Iraqi prisoner, while officials worked Thursday to try to free a Japanese journalist held by the militants.  

The message, read in English by a voice the Japanese government said was likely that of hostage Kenji Goto, was released online late Wednesday after Jordan offered to hand over the al-Qaida-linked would-be suicide bomber to the Islamic State group in exchange for Jordanian air force pilot, Lieutenant Maaz al-Kassasbeh.   

The recording says Jordan must present Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi woman convicted of involvement in deadly Amman hotel bombings in 2005, at the Turkish border by sunset Thursday in exchange for Goto's life or the pilot would be killed. It wasn't clear what Goto's fate would be if the woman wasn't returned. 

It was not possible to verify the contents of the recording, which was distributed on Twitter by Islamic State-affiliated accounts. 

In Tokyo, government spokesman Yoshihide Suga said Thursday the government was in close communications and "deeply trusts" the Jordan government. He said Japan was doing its utmost to free Goto, working with nations in the region, including Turkey, Jordan and Israel. 

"We are trying to confirm (the message), but we think there is a high probability that this is Mr. Goto's voice," he said. 

Shifting demands

Efforts to free al-Kaseasbeh and Goto gained urgency after a purported online ultimatum claimed Tuesday that the IS would kill both hostages within 24 hours if Jordan did not free al-Rishawi. 

Japan has scrambled to deal with the crisis that began last week with the release of a video by the Islamic State group showing Goto and another Japanese hostage, Haruna Yukawa, kneeling in orange jumpsuits between a masked man who threatened to kill them within 72 hours unless Japan paid a $200 million ransom. 

That demand has since shifted to one for the release of al-Rishawi. The militants have reportedly have killed Yukawa, 42, although that has not been confirmed. 

"This heinous terrorist act is totally unforgivable," Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said in parliament Thursday. 

Goto, a freelance journalist, was captured in October in Syria, apparently while trying to rescue Yukawa, who was taken hostage last summer. 

A precedent?

In his announcement that Jordan is ready to trade al-Rishawi for the pilot, government spokesman Mohammed al-Momani made no mention of Goto. 

Releasing the would-be hotel bomber linked to al-Qaida would breach Jordan's usual hard-line approach to the extremists and set a precedent for negotiating with them. 

It would also be a coup for the Islamic State group, which has already overrun large parts of neighboring Syria and Iraq.

Jordan is part of a US-led military alliance that has carried out airstrikes against the extremist group in Syria and Iraq in recent months. 

IS has not publicly demanded prisoner releases before and Jordan's main ally, the United States, opposes negotiations with extremists.

Jordanian King Abdullah II faces growing domestic pressure to bring the pilot home. The pilot's father said he met on Wednesday with Jordan's king, who he said assured him that "everything will be fine." 

The pilot's capture has hardened popular opposition among Jordanians to the air strikes, analysts said 

"Public opinion in Jordan is putting huge pressure on the government to negotiate with the Islamic State group," said Marwan Shehadeh, a scholar with ties to ultra-conservative Islamic groups in Jordan. "If the government doesn't make a serious effort to release him, the morale of the entire military will deteriorate and the public will lose trust in the political regime." 

Jordan reportedly is holding indirect talks with the militants through religious and tribal leaders in Iraq to secure the release of the hostages.

In his brief statement, al-Momani only said Jordan is willing to swap al-Rishawi for the pilot. He did not say if such an exchange is being arranged.

The 26-year-old pilot, al-Kaseasbeh, was seized after his Jordanian F-16 crashed in December near the Islamic State group's de facto capital of Raqqa in Syria. He is the first foreign military pilot the militants have captured since the coalition began its airstrikes in August.

Previous captives may have been freed in exchange for ransom, although the governments involved have refused to confirm any payments were made. 

The Islamic State group broke with al-Qaida's central leadership in 2013 and has clashed with its Syrian branch, but it reveres the global terror network's former Iraqi affiliate, which battled U.S. forces and claimed the 2005 Amman attack.

 

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