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Japan confirms identity of journalist freed from Syria

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Mr. Jumpei Yasuda AV

Japan confirmed on Wednesday that a man freed from Syria is a Japanese freelance journalist who was kidnapped three years ago and said that he appears to be in good health.

The man was identified as Jumpei Yasuda, Foreign Minister Taro Kono said.

“We are extremely pleased that we have confirmed the safety of Mr. Jumpei Yasuda,” Kono told reporters. He said Japanese Embassy officials met with Yasuda at an immigration center in southern Turkey near the border with Syria, where he has been protected since he was freed on Tuesday. Kono said Yasuda appeared to be in good health.

Yasuda was kidnapped in 2015 by al-Qaida’s branch in Syria, known at the time as the Nusra Front after contact with him was lost in June that year. A war monitoring group said that he was most recently held by a Syrian commander with the Turkistan Islamic Party, which mostly comprises Chinese jihadis in Syria.

The news of Yasuda’s release came late on Tuesday from Qatar, which helped in efforts for his release along with Turkey and other countries in the region, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said, thanking them for their support.

Asked if any ransom was paid, Suga said, “There is no fact that ransom money was paid.” Yasuda’s parents earlier said that they couldn’t wait to see their son return home.

“I was just praying for his safe return,” his mother Sachiko Yasuda, 75, told Japan’s NHK public television as she and her husband stood in front of their home outside Tokyo, holding a “thousand cranes” well-wishing origami ornament that she had added to every day for three years.

Yasuda started reporting on the Middle East in the early 2000s. He was taken a hostage in Iraq in 2004 with three other Japanese but was freed after Islamic clerics negotiated his release.

His last work in Syria involved reporting on his friend Kenji Goto, a Japanese journalist who was taken a hostage and killed by the Islamic State group.

Contact was lost with Yasuda after he sent a message to another Japanese freelancer on June 23, 2015. In his last tweet two days earlier, Yasuda said his reporting was often obstructed and that he would stop tweeting his location and activities.

Several videos showing a man believed to be Yasuda have been released in the past year.

In one video released in July, a bearded man thought to be Yasuda said that he was in a harsh environment and needed to be rescued immediately. Syria has been one of the most dangerous places for journalists since the conflict there began in March 2011, with dozens killed or kidnapped. Several journalists are still missing in Syria and their fates are unknown.

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