Junpei Yasuda is reportedly being held by al-Nusra Front after he entered Syria from Turkey last summer.
by Al JazeeraA video has surfaced online showing a missing Japanese journalist, reportedly held by an al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria, reading a message to his family and country.
Dressed in a dark sweater with a scarf, Jumpei Yasuda mostly seemed calm as he spoke in English in the one-minute video, which was posted on Thursday.
Yasuda, sitting at a table in front of a white wall, said he missed his family but could not be with them.
“Hello, I am Jumpei Yasuda. Today is my birthday, 16 March,” he said.
Japanese media said Yasuda was captured by al-Nusra Front after entering Syria from Turkey in June.
Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said the man in the video appeared to be Yasuda but he would not confirm the authenticity of the footage.
“The safety of Japanese citizens is one of our most important duties and we are gathering information and making all possible efforts to respond,” Suga told a news conference, declining to give details.
He added that the government was not aware that any ransom request had been made.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS) group beheaded two Japanese nationals – a self-styled security consultant and a veteran war reporter – early last year.
The gruesome executions captured the attention of Japan but the government said at the time it would not negotiate with the fighters for their release.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe came under fire for his handling of hostage cases, something he would like to avoid with an election looming this summer. Critics say his more robust security stance risks getting Japan involved in more international conflicts.
The journalist in the video did not give any information about who was holding him or any demands they had. He said “they” allowed him to say what he wanted.
After saying he wished he could hug his wife, father, mother and brother, he said: “I have to say to something to my country: When you’re sitting there, wherever you are, in a dark room, suffering with the pain, there’s still no one. No one answering. No one responding. You’re invisible.”
Yasuda, a freelance journalist since 2003, was held in Baghdad in 2004 and drew criticism for drawing the Japanese government into negotiations for his release.