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Today's Paper | December 19, 2024

Published 07 May, 2012 06:50am

US hostage Weinstein appears in Qaeda video: SITE

HONG KONG: US hostage Warren Weinstein has appeared in an al Qaeda video for the first time since he was kidnapped in Pakistan in August last year.

According to the US monitoring service SITE, the two minute, 40 second video was posted on jihadist forums by al Qaeda's media arm as-Sahab on Sunday.

There is no indication of when the video was made.

The elderly Weinstein, dressed in a traditional Pakistani tunic and speaking impassively to camera in English, tells his wife Elaine that “I'm fine, I'm well, I'm getting all my medications, I'm being taken care of”.

He also urges US President Barack Obama to respond to the demands of his kidnappers.

Weinstein was snatched after gunmen tricked their way into his Lahore home on August 13, days before he was due to return to the United States.

He was country director for US-based consultancy J.E. Austin Associates, which does contracting work with the US Agency for International Development.

He suffers from asthma, heart problems and high blood pressure.

Among its demands in exchange for Weinstein, al Qaeda has called for the release from US custody of “Blind Sheikh” Omar Abdul Rahman, Ramzi Yousef and Sayyid Nosair, who are tied to the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

Al Qaeda had also demanded the release of the family of Osama bin Laden.

The wives and children of the terror group's late founder were deported from Pakistan to Saudi Arabia last month.

“If you accept the demands, I live; if you don't accept the demands, then I die,” Weinstein told Obama in the video, which showed the hostage sitting in a room in front of a white sheet, behind a table with books and food on it.

In a video message posted on militant websites in December, al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri said Weinstein would be released if the United States stopped airstrikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen. He also demanded the release of all al Qaeda and Taliban suspects around the world.

The SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant messages, said Al-Sahab, al Qaeda's media arm, posted the Weinstein video on jihadist forums Sunday.

''It's important you accept the demands and act quickly and don't delay,'' Weinstein said in the video, addressing Obama. ''There'll be no benefit in delaying; it will just make things more difficult for me.''   He also appealed to Obama as a father. If the president responds to the militants' demands, Weinstein said, ''then I will live and hopefully rejoin my family and also enjoy my children, my two daughters, like you enjoy your two daughters.''

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