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Sunday, September 21, 2014

A peaceful, selfless man: Wife of captive Alan Henning begs ISIS to let him go

The wife of British hostage Alan Henning pleaded Saturday with ISIS to release him, describing her husband as a "peaceful, selfless man" who was only in Syria to help people in need.
"I cannot see how it could assist any state's cause to allow the world to see a man like Alan dying," Barbara Henning said, according to a message released by the UK Foreign Office. ISIS refers to itself as "the Islamic State."
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Friend: As sister of Islam, spare him
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Wife of hostage pleads with ISIS
Alan Henning, a taxi driver from near Manchester, England, was part of a team of volunteers that traveled to Syria in December to deliver food and water to people affected by the Middle Eastern country's devastating civil war.
He was abducted the day after Christmas by masked gunmen, according to other people in the aid convoy.
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Henning's family pleads for his life
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Appeals for ISIS Hostage
In a videotaped execution of British aid worker David Haines, made public last weekend, ISIS displayed Henning and threatened to kill him next.
No response to messages
The Sunni extremist group, which controls large areas of Iraq and Syria, has already beheaded three Western captives in recent weeks -- Haines, and the American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff.
The videos of the executions have pointed to U.S. airstrikes against ISIS forces in Iraq as the motivation. In Haines' case, the militant group described the killing as "a message to the allies of America."
Henning's wife said her husband, a father of two, was only trying to do good in Syria.
"Alan is a peaceful, selfless man who left his family and his job as a taxi driver in the UK to drive in a convoy all the way to Syria with his Muslim colleagues and friends to help those most in need," she said in the statement.
She expressed concern that his captors weren't answering her calls for his release.
"I have sent some really important messages but they have not been responded to," she said.
'Executing this man is not the answer'
ISIS has shown no regard in recent weeks for pleas from the families of its Western hostages.
Days before Foley's killing was made public on August 19, his family sent the extremists a message, asking them to show mercy. But they never heard back.
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Remembering aid worker David Haines
Statement from Family of Executed Amer.
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/Diane Foley: Our country let Jim down
The week before Sotloff's execution became known, his mother released a video pleading with ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi not to kill him.
And news of Haines' death came the same day that his family released a brief message to his captors through the UK Foreign Office.
Henning's wife urged the militants to respond.
"I pray that the people holding Alan respond to my messages and contact me before it is too late," she said. "When they hear this message, I implore the people of the Islamic State to see it in their hearts to release my husband, Alan Henning."
Leading Muslim figures in the United Kingdom have also called for Henning's release in a video posted on YouTube in which they say that killing him isn't permitted by Islamic law.
"Whatever your grievance with American or British foreign policy, executing this man is not the answer," said Shaykh Haitham Al Haddad, a judge on the Shariah Council in London. "We ask you to adhere to the Shariah ruling on this matter and release him immediately and unconditionally."
The only non-Muslim
Henning was making his fourth trip to Syria with an aid convoy when he was abducted.
While part of the convoy stopped at the Turkish border, Henning -- the only non-Muslim in the group -- volunteered to cross into Syria with a 10-person advance party.
In video shot on that day, he explained part of his rationale for answering the call to help. "It's all worthwhile when you see what is needed actually gets where it needs to go," he said, before hugging a colleague.
Henning was kidnapped the next day.
Dr. Shameela Islam-Zulfiqar, a volunteer doctor who stayed behind the main part of the convoy at the Turkish border, said they got a phone call saying Henning had been taken by masked gunmen.
"This was something that we thought was just a temporary measure, with him being a non-Muslim and being visibly English," she told CNN.
The other members of the convoy thought "that they would just question him further and then they would let him go," she said. But amid clashes between ISIS and rival rebel factions in the area, that didn't happen.
'He is not to blame'
Now, Islam-Zulfiqar says she has a message for the people holding Henning.
"As your sister in Islam, I would implore you and beg of you: please spare the life of this innocent man," she said. "He is not part of your struggle. He is not to blame for the actions of Western governments that you fight."

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Imprisoned American wanted to become 'second Snowden'

An American sentenced in North Korea ripped up his visa so he could go to prison and expose human rights violations there, state media said Saturday.
Matthew Todd Miller was convicted of committing "acts hostile" to North Korea and sentenced to six years of hard labor last week.
Saturday's report in the state-run Korean Central News Agency boldly heaped blame on Miller, claiming his acts were a preconceived plan to gain notoriety.
The 24-year-old from Bakersfield, California, arrived in North Korea as a tourist in April.
After his arrival, he tore his visa at Pyongyang's airport and shouted his desire to seek asylum, according to KCNA.
'Rudely behaved'
State media described him as "rudely behaved," saying he was sent to infiltrate prison as part of a United States campaign against North Korea.
"He perpetrated the above-said acts in the hope of becoming a world famous guy and the second Snowden through intentional hooliganism," state media said.
Edward Snowden got asylum from Russia, where he fled last year after leaking classified U.S. government documents.
Photos: Americans detained abroad Photos: Americans detained abroad
http://newsupgrade24.blogspot.com/N. Korea: American gets 6-year sentence
Once sentenced, Miller hoped to meet Kenneth Bae, another American detained in North Korea.
He planned to secure Bae's release so both can serve as "witnesses" to the human rights violations in the nation, state media said.
"The crime committed by Miller Matthew Todd was prompted by his sinister political aim to deliberately slander the DPRK," it said.
DPRK refers to North Korea's official name, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Its government is a communist dictatorship renowned for human rights abuses.
Washington demands release
The U.S. State Department has demanded that North Korea release Miller and Bae, and American Jeffrey Fowle.
Fowle, 56, was arrested in June while traveling as a tourist.
Bae, who was detained in 2012, has been accused of planning to bring down the government through religious activities. He was moved from a hospital to a labor camp.
Miller talks to CNN
Earlier this month, Miller told CNN's Will Ripley that he "prepared to violate the law of DPRK before coming here. And I deliberately committed my crime."
But Miller didn't elaborate on what his "crime" was. He said he wouldn't learn of his charges until he went to trial.
It's unclear whether his statements were made freely or under coercion.
First stop was South Korea
Miller's family lives in Bakersfield, and he is a 2008 graduate of Bakersfield High School, according to CNN affiliate KBAK.
In a July interview, a neighbor told The Associated Press that Miller went to South Korea about four years ago to visit his brother and started teaching English.
He traveled to North Korea this year after arranging a private tour through the U.S.-based company Uri Tours, which takes tourists into North Korea.
Uri Tours has said it doesn't have "any understanding of why" Miller ripped up his visa.
The company offers tours despite U.S. State Department warnings about arbitrary arrest and detention in North Korea.

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