IRAQ: slamic militants in Iraq have handed over two French hostages to another guerrilla group opposed to their kidnap and murder, the editor of one of the reporters held captive said yesterday.
As hopes rose that journalists Georges Malbrunot and Christian Chesnot could be released as soon as today, the Muslim day of prayer, French Foreign Minister Mr Michel Barnier told reporters he understood the pair were "alive and getting good treatment".
Le Figaro editor Jean de Belot said on France Info radio: "The latest information is that Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot have been handed over by the Islamic Army in Iraq to an Iraqi Sunni guerrilla group ... an opposition that we know for a few days now has been in favour of the release of the hostages."
The opposition guerrilla group now holding the men, seized by the Islamic Army in Iraq on August 20th, had in recent days come out in favour of the men's release, he added.
"Some people are talking of their release this night, others talk of tomorrow morning... but until the good news has actually arrived, we cannot allow ourselves to be absolutely reassured," he said yesterday.
The new mood of optimism, tempered by the announcement by Iraqi militants that they had killed three Turkish captives, was reflected in comments by French Muslim leaders who flew to the region to help secure the journalists' freedom.
Mr Mohamed Bechari, vice-president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith, told reporters the French Muslim delegation was "optimistic and confident (the hostages) will be released soon".
In Paris, French Interior Minister Mr Dominique de Villepin urged caution but said yesterday on France 2 television: "The indications that we have are positive, and give us confidence and encourage us to act. Tomorrow is the day of prayer. Friday is a great moment of coming together, and meditation, I would like to believe that we could hope for a happy outcome."
Hostage-taking has become part of a struggle in Iraq in which insurgents use everything from suicide-bombers to kidnappings to undermine the interim government of Prime Minister Mr Iyad Allawi and the US-led occupation.
Scores of hostages from dozens of countries have been seized in the past five months, and more than 20 have been killed by their captors. The seizure of the Frenchmen stunned France, which opposed the US-led war in Iraq and has refused to send troops there.
France has steadfastly refused to bow to the hostage-takers' demand that Paris rescind a law banning Muslim headscarves in schools.
The law went into force yesterday as some 12 million French pupils returned to their desks. Few girls wore the traditional head garment and there were no immediate reports of protests as classes began.
The Muslim headscarf was banned along with Jewish skullcaps and large Christian crosses in a bid to keep religious extremism out of schools.
France, a fierce opponent of the war in Iraq, won unprecedented support from the Arab world, which publicly demanded the journalists be released.
French Muslims, even those who oppose the headscarf ban, united in rejecting the kidnappers' pressure.
The kidnappers may be seeking a face-saving way out of the crisis because of the appeals from the Arab world, according to a French journalist who says she has been in contact for several months with the group now holding the hostages.