BAGHDAD,
September 3 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - France Friday,
September, 3, was making final preparations to secure the safe
transfer of its two nationals, being hostages in Iraq, to Jordan after
their "imminent" release, a member of the French Muslim
mission told IslamOnline.net.
"(The
problem) of taking the two hostages to Amman remains the hottest now,
as efforts are there to guarantee their personal safety after the
hoped-for imminent release," Mohamed Bechari.
Bechari,
vice president of the French Council for Muslim Faith (CFCM), is one
of the three-man delegation, who had gone to Iraq to stress the
message that French Muslims rejected the kidnappers' pressure.
Speaking
by telephone from Amman, after wrapping up a Baghdad visit, he told
IOL that Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot are "alive and
in good health".
Asked
when he expects the release of the two journalists, Bechari said
briefly: "We await their release soon".
"Muslims
all over the world hope that it will be today, Friday - which is a
holy day for Muslims," he said, without elaborating.
"I
could not go over all details now, only after their release," he
said.
Another
member of the French Muslim delegation said earlier in the day the
kidnappers wish to free the hostages.
"But
they do not know how to do it because they are afraid about the
Americans and also that the hostages could fall into the hands of
another group. These are the obstacles to freeing them," said
Fouad Allaoui.
"Fear
From Americans"
Bechari
refused to comment on Allaoui’s statements, only saying: "There
are parties who do not want France to have a moderate policy on
Iraq."
Paris
has been a staunch opponent to the US-led invasion of Iraq, and has
adamantly paid no heed to US calls for send troops to the oil-rich but
flashpoint country.
One
expert on the Iraqi fighters told Agence France-Presse (AFP) the two
Frenchmen were being held in the city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad,
and suggested US strike on the town Wednesday, September 1, risked
complicating the negotiations.
The
strike killed twenty people, including three children, women and
elderly men.
Chesnot
and Malbrunot disappeared in Iraq on August 20, the day they were to
have left Baghdad for the Shiite holy city of Najaf, then the scene of
fierce fighting between US forces and Shiite militia loyal to Shiite
leader Moqtada Sadr.
Amman
French
Foreign Minister Michel Barnier and the French Muslim delegation were
in Jordan Friday hoping for the liberation of two French hostages.
"We
are holding a working meeting. There is an operational team with the
minister and we are in permanent contact with Baghdad and Paris,"
an assistant to Barnier said.
French
Culture Minister Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres said Thursday: "We
know they are alive and no longer in the hands of the abductors who
had held them."
"I
hope that we will, perhaps this night, tomorrow or in the next few
hours be able once and for all to turn the page on this tragic event
while remaining vigilant," he said.
He
warned, however, that "our two compatriots are not in complete
security with French forces."
Barnier
made similar comments at a news conference in Amman late Thursday.
"According
to the information we have received, which is being studied with the
greatest care, the two journalists are alive and in good health and
being well treated," said Barnier, who has been fiercely
campaigning for their release.
Jean
de Belot, managing editor of Le Figaro - an employer of the two
captives - said the kidnappers have handed them over to a Sunni Muslim
opposition group.
He
said the group favors their release but he stressed their status
wasn't clear.
"That
is an extremely positive point," de Belot told French radio.
"But
we must be prudent in this kind of mixed-up situation because we know
well that until the good news arrives, we can't let ourselves be
absolutely reassured," he added.
"Matter
of Time"
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|
"We know they are alive and no longer in the hands of the abductors who had held them," said de Vabres
|
The
Muslim delegation sounded upbeat after talks with the influential
Council of the Muslim Ulema (scholars), an association of Sunni
scholars who have helped mediate previous hostage releases in Iraq.
"They
are out of danger as was declared yesterday by Sheikh Hareth al-Dhari,
their release could just be a matter of time," said Sheikh Abdel
Salam al-Kubeisi, an influential cleric on the Committee of Muslim
Scholars.
Kubeisi's
organization has privileged contacts with the Sunni groups operating
in Iraq.
The
capture of the two French journalists has drawn international
condemnation and unprecedented appeals for their release from Muslim
leaders across the globe.
The
hostages, facing death, warned in a video that they the death threat
was real if France did not revoke the hijab law, but Paris has vowed
to stand its ground saying it must protect the country's strictly
secular traditions.
The
law prohibiting the wearing of hijab and "conspicuous"
religious insignia such as Jewish skullcaps and large Christian
crosses went into effect Thursday with the start of the academic year
in France.
According
to Islamic scholars, it is no escaping in Islam that captives should
be treated well and that their human rights should be observed.
"Moreover,
the Qur'an treats the captives on an equal footing with the weak
categories of society that deserve sympathy and charity such as the
orphans and the needy," said prominent Muslim leader Sheikh
Youssef Qaradawi in one edict.