Al-Qaeda captures Japanese hostage

Sanaa, November 22: Al-Qaeda gunmen have seized a Japanese engineer from his tribal kidnappers in Yemen, a tribal source who has been seeking to negotiate his release said on Saturday.

“The hostage was seized by elements of Al-Qaeda, who took him to an unknown destination in the Maarib region,” east of the capital, Sanaa, one of two tribal mediators said on condition of anonymity.

The man, identified by Japanese media as 63-year-old Takeo Mashimo, was kidnapped last Sunday in Arhab, northeast of Sanaa, by tribesmen seeking to exchange him for one of their relatives being held by police.

He was seized by Al-Qaeda on Friday night, with a second mediator saying Al-Qaeda became involved after being approached by someone close to the detained tribesman who was opposed to the Japanese hostage’s release.

The 22-year-old man whose release was being sought by the tribesmen was imprisoned by US forces for a year in Iraq, according to a source in Yemen. He was later arrested in Syria before being held in Sanaa, where he was sentenced to two years in prison without charges, the same source said.

Meanwhile, authorities have been rounding up members of the Al-Hanaq and Al-Gub tribes responsible for the initial kidnapping, the first source said.

Sheikh Abdul Jalil, a tribal leader, announced on Tuesday that the hostage had been freed but backtracked the following day, admitting he had been mistaken.

“The abductors had said they would free the hostage and had left to get him but when they came back they said they had changed their mind,” he said.

Jalil said they had agreed to release the hostage in exchange for their relative within 15 days.

“But at the last minute, they came back saying they want him liberated in three days,” he said.

The kidnappers were distrustful because a previous promise by President Ali Abdullah Saleh to release a detainee was not fulfilled, sources close to them said.

Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said on Wednesday that he was hopeful the hostage would be released soon.

He said there was no sign the engineer — employed by a Tokyo-based consultancy working on construction of an elementary school funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency — had been harmed in captivity.

—–Agencies