(Reuters) -
Islamic State militants said they had beheaded a second Japanese
hostage, journalist Kenji Goto, prompting Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to
vow to step up humanitarian aid to the group's opponents in the Middle
East and help bring his killers to justice. "I feel intense
indignation at this utterly cruel and despicable act of terrorism," a
grim-faced Abe told an emergency Cabinet meeting early on Sunday,
shortly after a video surfaced purporting to show the beheading of Goto,
after the failure of international efforts to secure his release
through a prisoner swap. The hardline Islamist group, which controls large parts of Syria and Iraq,
released the video showing a hooded man standing over Goto with a knife
to his throat, followed by footage of a head put on the back of a human
body. Japanese Defense Minister Gen Nakatani said the video appeared to
be genuine. The video was
released exactly a week after footage appearing to show the beheaded
body of another Japanese hostage, Haruna Yukawa. "I will never forgive these terrorists," Abe said. "Japan will work with the international community to bring those responsible for this crime to justice. Japan will never give in to terrorism." When
Islamic State first threatened Goto, 47, and Yukawa, 42, two weeks ago,
it justified its move by citing Abe's pledge of $200 million in aid to
countries battling the militant group. But
in a show of defiance, Abe on Sunday vowed to increase Japan's food,
medicine and other humanitarian aid for the Middle East. Islamic
State had said Goto was held along with a Jordanian pilot. Efforts to
win their release had focused on the possible release in exchange of an
Iraqi would-be suicide bomber jailed in Jordan 10 years ago. The video
did not mention the pilot. President Barack Obama
said the United States condemned the "heinous murder" and would continue
to work with allies to destroy the hardline Islamist group. Britain and France also condemned the killing. Addressing
Abe, the militant in the video said: "Because of your reckless decision
to take part in an unwinnable war, this knife will not only slaughter
Kenji, but will also carry on and cause carnage wherever your people are
found. So let the nightmare for Japan begin." NO WORD ON PILOT The
militant had the same British accent as the man featured in previous
Islamic State videos showing beheadings. Goto wore an orange jumpsuit
like Islamic State captives in past footage. The
landscape in the video showed a hill and land covered in scrub, and
appeared different to the desert setting of previous videos. Abe's
government had put high priority on seeking the release of Goto, a
veteran war correspondent captured by the militants in late October when
he went to Syria seeking Yukawa's release. Yukawa was seized by militants in August after going to Syria to launch a security company. Goto's
mother Junko Ishido, who earlier had appealed for his safe release,
said, "I am too upset to find the words to express myself. My son's last
act was to go to Syria to help a fellow Japanese. So I want people to understand my son's kindness and courage." Goto’s
older brother, Junichi Goto, said, "I had hoped to give thanks for his
return alive. But, as his brother, this outcome is very regrettable.” Japanese
coalition and opposition politicians also expressed anger, but in a
sign of a potential political split, the main opposition party
questioned the wisdom of provoking Islamic State. "We must not appear to be giving in to terrorism," said Yukio Edano, secretary-general of the Democratic Party of Japan. "But
at the same time, putting our subjective intentions aside, there is no
need to provoke and send a message that can be mistakenly interpreted as
giving the other side an excuse," he said in a discussion programme on
public broadcaster NHK. Islamic
State, an offshoot of al Qaeda, has beheaded a number of Western
journalists and aid workers, saying they were paying the price for their
governments' fight against the group. It
has also killed many local people, through beheadings, stonings and
shootings, accusing them of violating their hardline interpretation of
Islamic law. There was no
mention in the one-minute video of Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh
who was seized by Islamic State after his jet crashed in northeast Syria in December during a bombing mission against the militants. An
audio message that appeared to be from Goto earlier this week said
Kasaesbeh would be killed if Jordan did not free Iraqi Sajida
al-Rishawi, in jail for her role in a 2005 suicide bomb attack that
killed 60 people in the Jordanian capital Amman. WAR CORRESPONDENT Goto
began working as a full-time war correspondent in 1996 and had
established a reputation as a careful and reliable operator for Japanese
broadcasters, including NHK. In
October, his wife had a baby, the couple's second child. He had an
older daughter from a previous marriage, people who know the family
said. Yukawa was captured in August outside the Syrian city of Aleppo. Friends say Goto travelled from Tokyo to Istanbul and from there to Syria, sending a message on Oct. 25 that he had crossed the border and was safe. "Whatever
happens, this is my responsibility," Goto said on a video recorded
shortly before he set out for Raqqa. That was the last time he was seen
before an Islamic State video released on Jan. 20 appearing to show both
Japanese men and threatening to kill them unless the group received
$200 million in ransom.
Islamic State says it has beheaded second Japanese hostage Goto

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