Insurgents in Iraq have kidnapped two Palestinians with Israeli identity cards and accused them of spying for Israel, according to footage shown by an Iranian TV station. One of the abductees said in the videotape aired yesterday that he worked for RTI International, a North Carolina research institute under contract from the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to participate in the reconstruction of Iraq. Iran’s Al-Alam television, monitored in Israel, showed footage of the two men, identifying them as Nabil George Yaakob Razuq and Ahmed Yassin Tikati. It said they had been kidnapped by the Ansar a-Din group. "We are a religious faction," a masked man said in the tape.
"We have captured spies who belong to the Zionist enemy, and we demand the immediate release of all the prisoners who belong to the religious factions (in Iraq), especially the women. We will negotiate over these two captives." The videotape also showed an Israeli identity card, an Israeli health service provider’s card, an Israeli driver’s licence, a driving licence issued by the US state of Georgia and a student card from Augusta College in Georgia. "I am Nabil George Yaakob, an Israeli working for RTI," a frightened-looking Razuk said in the videotape, giving his age as 30. He said he worked for RTI. Relatives in East Jerusalem told reporters he had attended university in Georgia. Tikati, who also looked terrified, made a similar "confession", and said he was 33 years old.
Israeli cabinet minister Gideon Ezra said both men were residents of East Jerusalem. "They are not Israeli citizens," he told Israel’s Channel Two television. "They are not couriers or agents of the (Israeli intelligence service) Mossad." But Ezra said Israel would try through diplomatic means to get them "out of the clutches of evil". Palestinians from East Jerusalem, annexed by Israel after its capture along with the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war, are issued with Israeli identity cards. They are eligible for Israeli citizenship, although few apply for it. Asked by Channel Two if he had a message for the kidnappers, Razuq’s uncle, Anton, said in Arabic: "We have been living under Israeli occupation since 1967. Like other Arabs in East Jerusalem, we have Israeli identity cards. . .that doesn’t mean we have any attachment to (Israel)." Earlier, seven South Koreans, three Japanese and a Briton were reported have been seized in Iraq by militants. The Koreans were later reported to have been released. |