An American woman has pleaded for the life of her
journalist son, held hostage in Syria by the Islamic State group, just
over a week after self-declared jihadists beheaded a fellow US reporter
and threatened more murders. In a video released on Wednesday, Shirley Sotloff directly addressed
the group's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, saying her son Steven Sotloff
was "an innocent journalist" who had no control over US policy in the
Middle East. The plea came just over a week after the group threatened in a video
to kill the 31-year-old unless the US stopped bombing its territory in
Iraq. The group murdered James Foley, another American journalist, in
the same video. "You, the caliph, can grant amnesty. I ask you, please, release my
child. I ask you to use your authority to spare his life,'' Mrs Sotloff
said in the video, which was first broadcast on the Al Arabiya network. "He is an honorable man and has always tried to help the weak," she said. Islamic State supporters later on Wednesday shared the video on the
internet, but blurred Mrs Sotloff's face because their interpretation of
Islam does not allow a woman's face to be shown. Steven Sotloff has been missing in Syria in August 2013. Josh Earnest, a spokesman for the US president Barack Obama, said he
did not know whether he had seen the appeal, but he said the
administration was "deeply engaged" in trying to gain release of all
Americans held hostage in the Middle East. "She obviously feels desperate about the safety and wellbeing of her
son, and understandably so, and that is why our thoughts and prayers are
with Mr Sotloff's family at this very difficult and trying time,''
Earnest said. A UN commission in Geneva, meanwhile, accused the Islamic State
group of committing crimes against humanity with attacks on civilians,
and photos emerged of the extremists' bloody takeover of a Syrian
military air base. In one photo posted online, masked gunmen were seen shooting seven
men kneeling on the ground, some dressed in what appeared to be Syrian
military uniforms, after the seizure of the Tabqa air base in the
northeastern Syrian province of Raqqa earlier this week. It also said it believed the Syrian regime had used chlorine gas in attacks on rebels, which have been reported previously by Al Jazeera, bloggers and other media organisations. Syria's president Bashar al-Asad last year agreed to give up his chemical weapons stockpile under a UN-brokered deal. Chroline is however a "dual use" substance and was not included on the list of materials to be reliquished.
Mother pleads for life of IS group hostage

Al Jazeera
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