UK captive death claim taken seriously

Sun Jul 20, 2008 5:56pm BST
 
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LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Saturday he was taking seriously a claim by militants in Iraq that one of five Britons they are holding hostage has killed himself.

The Sunday Times reported that the kidnappers made the claim in a videotaped statement handed to its representative in Iraq last week.

The statement said one of the hostages, named as Jason, committed suicide on May 25 -- one year after the Britons were seized by a Shi'ite militant group from inside an Iraqi Finance Ministry building in a raid in Baghdad.

"Clearly this is a very distressing development. We are taking this very seriously. There are many people working behind the scenes trying to find a solution," Brown said in a statement.

Brown said he discussed the issue of the five hostages with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in Baghdad on Saturday. "We both share a desire to see them returned safely to their families. I call on those holding the hostages to release them immediately and unconditionally".

A Foreign Office spokesman in London said: "There is no independent verification of the claims in this video, therefore we are not going to comment on its veracity".

Iraq's national security adviser, Mowaffak al-Rubaie, had said in June that the five Britons, who have not been named, were still alive.

There was no news of the men until a video featuring one of them was released last December. It included a statement from the captors threatening to kill him unless Britain pulled its troops out of Iraq.

A second video was released in February, this time featuring a second hostage who appealed for the release of nine Iraqis in return for the Britons' freedom.  Continued...

 
Prime Minister Gordon Brown leaves Downing Street to attend the weekly Prime Minister's Questions at the Houses of Parliament, in London December 2, 2009. REUTERS/Toby Melville
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