Islamic militants in the Philippines have
released a video showing the beheading of a German hostage after they
demanded a £500,000 ransom for the man.
Authorities are trying to confirm whether or not Jurgen Gustav Kantner had been killed by the notorious Abu Sayyaf group.
The brief video was circulated on Monday by the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi websites
It
shows Mr Kantner, 70, sitting in a grassy clearing and saying 'Now he
kills me' shortly before a masked militant beheads him with a curved
knife.
A few gunmen mutter 'Allahu Akbar,' or 'God is great,' in the video that lasts a minute and 43 seconds.
The
militants had previously threatened to kill him by mid afternoon Sunday
if a ransom of 30 million pesos ($605,000) was not paid, Philippine
officials said.
The Philippine military
said it would not confirm Kantner's death unless it sees the captive's
remains or other compelling evidence.
Military spokesman Brig. Gen. Restituto Padilla said he 'will not dignify that video by watching it.'
'They
can shout and claim whatever they want but we will not rely on this,'
Padilla said, adding an ongoing offensive against the Abu Sayyaf and
attempts to rescue foreign and local hostages held by the militants
would continue.
He added that the military
had received information about infighting within Abu Sayyaf, with some
militants preferring to wait for a huge ransom and a more hardline
commander demanding that the German be killed as the militants had
announced.
German nationals Kantner and his wife Sabine Merz, pictured right, pose for a photograph in 2009 in the Somali port of Berbera
In Germany, Foreign Ministry
spokesman Martin Schaefer said German experts were evaluating the video
to determine whether it was authentic, but that if it was, it's 'deeply
shocking.'
'It makes you question what
can lead people to commit such a barbaric crime, but, at the moment,
I'm not in a position to say whether the video's authentic,' he said.
He
would not give any details on possible negotiations with the
kidnappers, including whether there was a ransom demand, citing
government policy and saying that 'public comment never helps in finding
a solution' in such cases.
Abu Sayyaf claimed in
November that its gunmen had kidnapped Kantner and killed a woman,
believed to be Kantner's wife, Sabine Merz, sailing with him off
neighbouring Malaysia's Sabah state.
Villagers
later found a dead woman on a yacht with the German flag, off Laparan
Island in Sulu province, in the southern Philippines.
Kantner
and his partner, Sabine Merz, have been abducted before and were taken
hostage by Somali pirates in 2008 but were later freed.
The
Abu Sayyaf, which the U.S. and the Philippines have blacklisted as a
terrorist organization, is holding more than 20 mostly foreign captives
and local hostages in jungle encampments in the country's south.
They beheaded two Canadian men last year after separate ransom deadlines lapsed.
President
Rodrigo Duterte's adviser who deals with Muslim rebel groups, Jesus
Dureza, has appealed to the Abu Sayyaf to spare their hostages.
Duterte
has ordered troops to destroy the Abu Sayyaf extremists, saying their
ransom kidnappings were embarrassing and were creating a security alarm
in the waters bordering the south, Malaysia and Indonesia.
The three countries have made efforts to jointly shore up security along their busy sea border.
Source:Daily Mail
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