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Two
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BAGHDAD,
April 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Some Iraqi fighters,
holding three Japanese nationals, asked the Tokyo government Thursday,
April 8, to pull out its forces from occupied Iraq.
The
previously unknown group, calling itself the "Mujahedeen
Brigades", threatened to kill the three Japanese unless its
demand was met, giving the Japanese government three days to respond.
The
Qatar-based Aljazeera television aired soundless video of the trio and
their passports.
The
three, including a woman, appeared blindfolded in parts of the video,
while other shots clearly showed their faces and the rest of their
bodies.
Close-up
shots of the passports revealed their pictures, names and other
details.
The
footage showed one of them was a correspondent with a work permission
card written in Arabic.
Japan
insisted Thursday it has no plan to withdraw its troops from Iraq
despite the threats, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Since
our Self-Defense Forces are providing reconstruction support for Iraqi
people, we have no reason for withdrawal," Chief Cabinet
Secretary Yasuo Fukuda told a news conference.
Japan
has about 530 ground troops based in Samawah, part of a total planned
deployment of 1,100 soldiers for a mission in Iraq to purify water and
carry out other reconstruction tasks.
Japanese
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has been one of the strongest backers
of the U.S.-led invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Two
With Israeli IDs Held
An
Israeli Arab and an Arab resident of occupied Al-Quds (Jerusalem) are
being held in Iraq by a militia group called Ansar al-Din, Israeli
media reported Thursday.
Israeli
public television broadcast footage taken from a tape first shown on
the Iranian Arabic-language television station Al Alam.
It
showed an Israeli medical card, a discount card for an Israeli
supermarket, a U.S. driving license and an outdated student card.
A
spokesman for the group told Al-Alam channel that the two will not be
released unless all prisoners and detainees held by U.S. occupation
forces in Iraq, including women, are freed.
A
clip from the tape showed the two answering questions from the Iraqi
fighters.
"Nabil
George Yaakub Razzuq from Israel. I work for RTI (Research Triangle
Institute -- a U.S. think-tank which has a contract from USAID to
provide local governance support in Iraq)," said one in Arabic,
giving his age as 30.
"Ahmed
Yassin Tikati. I work for Israel and for the international aid
agency," said the second, also in Arabic, giving his age as 33.
Separately,
Sadr's Mehdi Army said it was holding Spanish hostages and possibly an
American.
Spanish
officials denied the report, and U.S. officials said they were not
aware of any coalition troops missing.
Sadr's
militia said it planned to swap them for one of its leaders, Mustafa
al-Yaacubi, arrested earlier this week by the U.S.-led occupation
forces.
Korean
Pastors Freed
Seven
South Korean missionaries held by armed Iraqis on Thursday, April 8,
were freed unharmed after several hours, the Foreign Ministry
confirmed.
"The
seven were been freed and arrived at a Baghdad hotel," ministry
spokesman Shin Bong-Kil said.
Eight
South Koreans pastors were held by unidentified Iraqi fighters but a
female, identified as Kim Sang-Mi from an association of Christian
churches in South Korea, had fled.
According
to Yonhap news agency the group of pastors traveled to Iraq in order
to attend a Christian missionary event scheduled for the northern city
of Mosul from Friday through Sunday.
The
country insisted that its plans to dispatch more than 3,000 South
Korean troops would be unaffected by the recent development.
Resignation
Interim
Iraqi interior minister Nuri Badran said Thursday he has submitted his
resignation after U.S. overseer Paul Bremer expressed dissatisfaction
with the performance of his ministry.
"I
am resigning now," said Badran in a press conference.
"Bremer
is not satisfied with the performance of the interior ministry,"
added Badran, who said Bremer had also told him there was a need for a
reshuffle because of confessional balances.
Badran,
born in 1943, is a Shiite Muslim who once served in the government of
ousted president Saddam Hussein as ambassador to Russia and who fled
Iraq when it invaded Kuwait in 1990.