Philippine militants holding foreigners set ransom deadline

(FILES) This undated file handout photo released by Eastern Mindanao Command (EASTMINCOM) on September 22, 2015 shows Norwegian employee Kjartan Sekkinstad (L), and Canadian tourists John Ridsdel (C), and Robert Hall (R), the three kidnapped foreigners who were seized by gunmen from aboard yachts just before midnight on September 21, 2015 on Samal island, a short boat ride from the southern commercial centre of Davao on Mindanao island.   Islamic militants holding two Canadians and a Norwegian in the southern Philippine jungles have set a one-month deadline for millions of dollars in ransom to be paid, according to a video released on March 10, 2016.  / AFP / EASTMINCOM / STRINGER
(FILES) This undated file handout photo released by Eastern Mindanao Command (EASTMINCOM) on September 22, 2015 shows Norwegian employee Kjartan Sekkinstad (L), and Canadian tourists John Ridsdel (C), and Robert Hall (R), the three kidnapped foreigners who were seized by gunmen from aboard yachts just before midnight on September 21, 2015 on Samal island, a short boat ride from the southern commercial centre of Davao on Mindanao island.
Islamic militants holding two Canadians and a Norwegian in the southern Philippine jungles have set a one-month deadline for millions of dollars in ransom to be paid, according to a video released on March 10, 2016.
/ AFP / EASTMINCOM / STRINGER

 

MANILA, Philippines (AFP) — Islamic militants holding two Canadians and a Norwegian in the southern Philippine jungles have set a one-month deadline for millions of dollars in ransom to be paid, according to a video released Thursday.

In the video posted on a local jihadist group’s Facebook page, the emaciated victims said they would be killed if the ransom was not paid.

Canadian tourists John Ridsdel and Robert Hall, Norwegian resort manager Kjartan Sekkingstad and Filipina Marites Flor were seized from yachts at a marina in the southern Philippines in September.

While the ransom amount was not specified, the militants in an earlier video demanded one billion pesos ($21 million) for each of the three foreigners, without mentioning the conditions for Flor’s release.

Hall identified their captors as members of the Abu Sayyaf, a local group notorious for bombings and kidnappings that has pledged allegiance to Islamic State jihadists in Iraq and Syria.

He said they were being held on Sulu, a remote island in the country’s southwestern tip that is a known Abu Sayyaf hideout.

A spokesman for the Norwegian foreign ministry in Oslo, Rune Bjastad, declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

The Canadian embassy in Manila was not immediately available for comment, while a spokeswoman for the government in Ottawa declined to speak on the matter.

A Philippine military spokesman, Brigadier-General Restituto Padilla, told AFP he could not comment on the video until he saw it in full.

The Philippine government has repeatedly said it has a “no-ransom policy”. But parties linked to foreigners held hostage by the Abu Sayyaf often pay to win their release.

In October 2014, the Abu Sayyaf claimed it received 250 million pesos ($5.3 million) in exchange for two German hostages they held captive for six months. Security analysts said a large ransom was paid.

The group is also believed to be holding a retired Italian missionary whom they seized from his pizzeria in the southern port city of Dipolog in October.

The Abu Sayyaf killed a Malaysian hostage last year, according to authorities.

 

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