MANILA: Al Qaeda linked militants in the southern Philippines have threatened to kill two German hostages they have been holding since April unless Germany stops supporting US action against Islamic State militants, the SITE monitoring service said.
Philippine security officials said yesterday that they were checking intelligence reports of the threats from the small but violent Abu Sayyaf group, which is also demanding a ransom of P250m for the captives’ release.
“They are reportedly held here but, as far as such demands are concerned, we are verifying it,” said Abraham Orbita, a police official.
Abu Sayyaf rose to prominence in the early 2000s by kidnapping foreigners. It has links with Al Qaeda, although analysts and Philippine security sources say it has lately been focused on kidnap-for-ransom and other criminal activities.
In the message, distributed via Twitter, the militants said they would “kill one of the two hostages” if their demands were not met within 15 days, according to SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks communications from Islamist groups.
“A message attributed to the Philippines-based Abu Sayyaf group threatened that two German hostages will be killed unless it is paid a ransom and Germany stops its support to the United States against Islamic State (IS),” SITE reported.
The German embassy in Manila declined to comment.
The United States and its Arab allies bombed Islamic State targets inside Syria for the first time on Tuesday. The Sunni group has seized swathes of territory in civil war-torn Syria and Iraq, slaughtering prisoners and ordering Shias and non-Muslims to convert or die.
Germany has ruled out taking part in air strikes, but did break a post-World War Two taboo on sending weapons to active conflict zones by agreeing to arm Kurdish fighters battling Islamic State fighters in northern Iraq.
A Philippine military intelligence source said he was aware of the threats to the German hostages from Abu Sayyaf, but doubted they would be carried out, predicting that the group would most likely negotiate a lower ransom.
“We take all threats seriously,” he said. “But, based on our experience in dealing with this group, they are plain criminals who are only interested in getting money. They will eventually settle for a smaller ‘board and
lodging fee’.”
The two Germans, a man and a woman, were seized at gunpoint from a yacht between Malaysian Borneo and the southern Philippines in April.
Abu Sayyaf has been blamed for beheadings, bombings and kidnappings for ransom. The group is also holding a Dutch, a Swiss, a Japanese and some Filipinos in the south of the mainly Roman Catholic state.
Reuters