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Kidnapped Saudi diplomat in Yemen asks for quick release | A Saudi Arabian diplomat
appeared in a video on Saturday for the first time since he was kidnapped in March,
asking the Saudi authorities to meet al-Qaida' s demands in order to secure his
release. "I urge Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah and the Saudi authorities to save
my life and secure my release from the al-Qaida's hands," he said in a short video
posted online. "You should accept the al-Qaida's demands of releasing its detainees
in Saudi jails," he added. Abdullah al-Khaledi, Saudi Arabia's deputy consul
in Yemen's southern port city of Aden, was abducted by the Yemen-based al-Qaida
in March outside his residential building in Aden. In April, the terrorist group
demanded the release of militants in Saudi prisons in exchange for releasing al-Khaledi.
The middle-aged diplomat, dressed in traditional Saudi clothes in the four-minute
video, made an emotional appeal to the Saudi king, saying that "My life is in
your hands. I appeal to you to respond to the demands of al-Qaida." Local media
reported that al-Khaledi had been moved to an al- Qaida hideout in the southern
province of Abyan or Shabwa, where the militants seized several cities last year.
The Saudi government said earlier that the terrorist group demanded an immediate
release of its detained militants from jails in the Saudi capital of Riyadh in
exchange for the abducted diplomat. However, it announced that it "will not bow
to the terrorists' demands." Beside the Saudi diplomat, the al-Qaida group also
kidnapped a Swiss woman and a French aid worker during the past two months, attempting
to force the Yemeni government to release its jailed members from the Yemeni and
Saudi prisons. Foreigners are frequently kidnapped in Yemen by powerful tribes
and the al-Qaida group who seek ransoms or intend to force the Yemeni government
to meet their political demands.
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