Group threatens to kill captive BBC man

The Palestinian group that kidnapped a British reporter has threatened to kill him.

The Palestinian group that kidnapped a British reporter has threatened to kill him.

In a statement e-mailed to reporters late today, the Army of Islam said British Broadcasting Corp. correspondent Alan Johnston will be "slaughtered like a sheep" if its demands are not met.

The message demanded that Abu Mohammed al-Maqdisi, who is being held in Jordan, be released. Al-Maqdisi is known as the spiritual mentor of the late al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Earlier, the group demanded freedom for Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi woman sentenced to death in Jordan for her role in the al-Qaeda-led triple hotel bombing in Jordan in 2005 that killed 60 people, Jordan's worst terrorist attack. Al-Rishawi, 35, was intended to be one of the suicide bombers.

READ MORE

In its message, the Palestinian group also called the Hamas arrest of two of its members a "declaration of war."

In response, Ghazi Hamad, spokesman for deposed Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, said, "We reject the continued captivity of Alan and we are still working to release him at the soonest possible opportunity."

Johnston was abducted from a Gaza street on March 12. His kidnapping has been condemned by governments, human rights groups, journalists' associations and Palestinian leaders.

Yesterday, the group posted a video message from Johnston on a militant website.

"I have been dressed in what is an explosive belt, which the kidnappers say will be detonated if there is an attempt to storm the area," he said in the recording. "They say they are ready to turn the hide-out into what they describe as a death zone if there is an attempt to free me by force."

A spokeswoman for the British Foreign Office condemned the release of the video, while Johnston's father, Graham Johnston, said his family was "most concerned and distressed at this latest development" and pleaded for his son to be freed unharmed.

AP