(Reuters) - Qatar is working to help free four Americans held hostage in Syria
by various armed groups, a Gulf source familiar with the matter said on
Monday, a day after the Gulf Arab state's diplomacy helped free a
journalist held since 2012. The source declined to
name the four or provide details, and Reuters could not independently
verify the assertion, but his account was broadly supported by other
sources. The reported
initiative by Qatar coincides with an effort by the tiny state to rebut
accusations by some of its Arab neighbors and Western politicians that
it supports the most anti-Western militant armed groups in Iraq and Syria.
Those allegations followed months of criticism by human rights groups
over its treatment of Asian guest workers and charges – denied by Doha –
of corruption in its successful bid to host the 2022 World Cup. The
wealthy country, which does back some rebel factions fighting to oust
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, has mediated the release of foreign
and Syrian captives on several occasions in the course of Syria's
three-year-old civil war. Its
latest foray into hostage diplomacy brought Sunday's release of Peter
Theo Curtis, an American held for nearly two years by al-Nusra Front, an
affiliate of al Qaeda. "Four
other Americans who have gone missing in Syria have now been located,
and Qatar is working to free them," the Gulf source told Reuters on
condition of anonymity. He said the hostages were being held by "various
groups" but declined to give details. Qatar's foreign ministry declined to comment. A
Doha-based source close to the Qatari government said without
elaborating that Washington was working with Qatar to try to free a
number of U.S. hostages in Syria. A
rebel commander in Syria reached by Skype from Beirut told Reuters that
Qatar was continuously trying to secure the release of captives of all
nationalities. BEHEADING "Qatar
has good connection here on the ground with various groups," he said.
"Freeing hostages is their priority, and whenever there is a chance,
they help. They use these connections to release hostages. Right now
they are working on several issues regarding hostages." A
Syrian opposition official in Doha said Qatar was trying to secure the
release of a number of hostages across Syria, but did not say how many. "Qatar
has very good connections with brigades inside Syria. That's why their
attempts have been successful, and more efforts are being made to free a
number of hostages across the country," said the official, who asked
not to be identified. In
Washington, a U.S. State Department spokesperson said the U.S.
government over the past two years had reached out to over two dozen
countries asking for help from anyone who could help secure the release
of American citizens held in Syria. News of Curtis's release emerged just days after Islamic State, a splinter al Qaeda group that operates in Syria and Iraq,
posted a video on the Internet showing one of its fighters beheading
American journalist James Foley, who was kidnapped in Syria in 2012. Qatar's
role in securing Curtis's freedom may help repair a reputation dented
by allegations from some of its Arab and Western critics that Doha
supported Islamic State and some other radical groups in Iraq and Syria. Qatar
denies it backs militant groups with al Qaeda ties, but it has been at
odds for months with some fellow Gulf states over its longstanding
support for the Muslim Brotherhood, a transnational Islamist group, and
charges by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates that Doha interferes in their internal affairs. Under
a policy of international self-promotion, Qatar has for years also
played peace broker in disputes from Somalia to Lebanon, and has
irritated conservative neighbors by supporting Arab Spring revolts and
bankrolling Islamist influence. Qatar
this week argued its aims in the region were peaceful and humanitarian,
issuing a statement condemning what it called Foley's "barbaric"
murder. Qatari Foreign
Minister Khaled al-Attiyah said earlier this year his country's
mediation had secured the release in March of 13 Greek Orthodox nuns
after more than three months of being held by Islamist fighters. The
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights identified the rebels
who took the nuns as the Nusra Front. Before that, Qatar helped win the release of 11 Lebanese Shi'ites in October 2013 after 17 months in captivity in Syria. LIMITATIONS While
the details of how Qatar managed to get Curtis free are yet to become
clear, the Gulf source said Qatari intelligence acting at the request of
the United States had obtained video proof that Curtis was alive,
something that had allowed negotiations for his release to begin. "The kidnappers had asked for ransom, but that's not something Qatar gets involved in," the source said without elaborating. The
source said Qatar had been willing to try to help free hostages held by
various Islamist groups, but found it hard to work with Islamic State,
whose militants have taken responsibility for killing Foley. The
video of Foley's beheading posted on Tuesday, together with a threat to
kill another American journalist being held hostage, Steven Sotloff,
inspired widespread revulsion in the West and a desire to hunt down
Foley's killer. The
U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists welcomed the release of
Curtis "after nearly two years of harrowing captivity in Syria". It
estimates that about 20 journalists are missing in Syria. Many of them
are believed to be held by Islamic State.
Qatar seeks to free more U.S. hostages in Syria: source
Zaman Alwasl
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