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Abdullah (L) and Hussain talk to journalists at the Convention Center in Baghdad (AFP)
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BAGHDAD,
September 26 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Two envoys from
Britain's leading Muslim organization arrived in Iraq Saturday,
September 25, to try to secure the release of a Briton taken hostage
by a militant group.
Daud
Abdullah and Musharraf Hussain, from the respected Muslim Council of
Britain (MCB), arrived in Baghdad late Saturday and said they would
hold talks with religious leaders and some politicians and try to make
contact with the kidnappers of Kenneth Bigley, 62, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
He
has been held by the Tawhid wal Jihad group of presumed Al-Qaeda
operative Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi. He was snatched on September 16 --
along with two American colleagues, Jack Hensley and Eugene Armstrong
who have since been beheaded.
“We
will do everything to contact them (the captors) while we are here,”
Abdullah told reporters upon arrival.
Abdullah
sought to highlight the strong public opposition in Britain to the war
on Iraq hoping this might have some resonance among the abductors.
Britain
was a leading member of the US-led forces that invaded the country in
2003 and now has the second largest foreign troop presence in Iraq
after the United States.
“We
come from Britain which, though being part of the coalition, though
being part of the mayhem and the destruction of Iraq, many people in
Britain did not support this and I see that the Bigley family itself,
as far as I know, was not in support of the war,” he said.
Religion
of Mercy
Hussain,
who is imam and director of the Karimia Institute in Nottingham, England, said they would try to seek common ground with the captors and
remind them that Islam was a religion of mercy and compassion and
against the killing of innocents and non-combatants.
“As
Muslim brothers to these captors ... we want to give the message that
our religion is one of compassion, of love, of non-violence and we
want to see Iraq as a free and democratic, successful, happy and prosperous nation,”
he said.
“That
can only happen through non-violence, which is the way of the Muslim
and our duty is to remind these Muslim brothers that that is what we
should be doing.”
Before
the envoys flew to Iraq, MCB chief Iqbal Sacranie said: “We appeal to the group that is
holding Ken Bigley to release him without delay and without harm.”
“He
is an elderly man and he is due to become a grandfather soon,” he
said in a statement. “Be merciful. Our religion Islam does not allow
us to harm the innocent.”
Bigley's
relatives have been relentless in their pleas to the captors and the
hostage himself made a heart-rending video-taped appeal to British
Prime Minister Tony Blair earlier this week.
Blair
vowed Saturday to do whatever he can to secure the release of Bigley
amid doubts over a claim on a website that the man was killed.
But
the Foreign Office said the website -- which earlier in the week
claimed that Italian
aid workers Simona Pari and Simona Torretta had been killed by
their captors -- was not credible.
The
issue of abductions in Iraq has caused a great controversy worldwide with Muslims from the four
corners of the world vigorously condemning such tactics in conformity
with the rulings of Islam.
A
well-known Algerian Islamic leader went on an
open-ended hunger strike till all foreigners abducted in Iraq are released.
Abbasi
Madani, the ailing leader of Algeria's banned Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), has vowed to continue the
hunger strike he began Tuesday, September 14, “until death”.
(Click here to read Islam’s
Stance on Killing Captives).