Syria gripped by hostage drama, rocket strike
Syria gripped by hostage drama, rocket strike, Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon warned the President Bashar al-Assad's government against further rocket attacks on Wednesday as the focus remained on a Japanese hostage held in Syria by Islamic State (IS) extremists.
Israel evacuated its Mount Hermon ski resort on the Golan Heights on Tuesday after at least two rockets were fired, allegedly from Syrian army positions. Syria, however, made no claim of responsibility.
Yaalon on Wednesday said Israel had struck Syrian army artillery posts. It was a clear message, he said, that "we will not tolerate any firing towards Israeli territory over violation of our sovereignty."
Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Middle East war. Last week, an Israeli air strike killed a Hezbollah commander.
IS demands release of suspect
A new video emerged Wednesday on which a voice said the IS would kill Japanese journalist Kenji Goto unless Jordan released Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi woman implicated in a 2005 terrorist attack on a hotel that killed 60 people.
Goto was abduction in Syria in October, apparently while trying to rescue Haruna Yukawa, who in a video last Saturday appeared to have been beheaded.
In Tokyo, Goto's mother Junko Ishido publicly pleaded to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to work with Jordan to save her son.
"Kenji has only a little time left," she said.
Abe described the latest video as "despicable" but vowed that Japan would not give in to terrorism.
Japan's deputy foreign minister Yasuhide Nakayama was in Amman Wednesday to coordinate efforts with Jordan.
The voice on the video demanded the release of al-Rishawi, saying unless she was freed within 24 hours, IS would killed a captured Jordanian pilot and then Goto.
The pilot, 26-year-old Mu'ath al-Kaseaseh, was seized in December near the extremists' stronghold of Raqqa when his Jordanian F-16 crashed.
Pilot's father pleads for release
The pilot's father, Safi al-Kaseasbeh, beseeched the Jordanian government to "meet the demands" of the Islamic State group.
He told the Associated Press that the "safety of Mu'ath means the stability of Jordan, and the death of Mu'ath means chaos in Jordan."
About 200 of the pilot's relatives protested outside offices of the government in Amman, urging it to meet the captors' demands.
The chairman of Jordan's foreign affairs committee, Bassam Al-Manaseer told the Bloomberg news agency that Jordan was in indirect talks with IS to secure the release of Goto and Kasaesbeh via religious and tribal leaders in Iraq.
Israel evacuated its Mount Hermon ski resort on the Golan Heights on Tuesday after at least two rockets were fired, allegedly from Syrian army positions. Syria, however, made no claim of responsibility.
Yaalon on Wednesday said Israel had struck Syrian army artillery posts. It was a clear message, he said, that "we will not tolerate any firing towards Israeli territory over violation of our sovereignty."
Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in the 1967 Middle East war. Last week, an Israeli air strike killed a Hezbollah commander.
IS demands release of suspect
A new video emerged Wednesday on which a voice said the IS would kill Japanese journalist Kenji Goto unless Jordan released Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi woman implicated in a 2005 terrorist attack on a hotel that killed 60 people.
Goto was abduction in Syria in October, apparently while trying to rescue Haruna Yukawa, who in a video last Saturday appeared to have been beheaded.
In Tokyo, Goto's mother Junko Ishido publicly pleaded to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to work with Jordan to save her son.
"Kenji has only a little time left," she said.
Abe described the latest video as "despicable" but vowed that Japan would not give in to terrorism.
Japan's deputy foreign minister Yasuhide Nakayama was in Amman Wednesday to coordinate efforts with Jordan.
The voice on the video demanded the release of al-Rishawi, saying unless she was freed within 24 hours, IS would killed a captured Jordanian pilot and then Goto.
The pilot, 26-year-old Mu'ath al-Kaseaseh, was seized in December near the extremists' stronghold of Raqqa when his Jordanian F-16 crashed.
Pilot's father pleads for release
The pilot's father, Safi al-Kaseasbeh, beseeched the Jordanian government to "meet the demands" of the Islamic State group.
He told the Associated Press that the "safety of Mu'ath means the stability of Jordan, and the death of Mu'ath means chaos in Jordan."
About 200 of the pilot's relatives protested outside offices of the government in Amman, urging it to meet the captors' demands.
The chairman of Jordan's foreign affairs committee, Bassam Al-Manaseer told the Bloomberg news agency that Jordan was in indirect talks with IS to secure the release of Goto and Kasaesbeh via religious and tribal leaders in Iraq.
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