Militants In Mali Release Video That Appears To Show 6 Western Hostages

A narrator speaking in English said the clip showed hostages from South Africa, France, Colombia, Australia, Romania and Switzerland.
The leaders of Burkina Faso, Mauritania, France, Mali, Chad and Niger pose during G5 Sahel Summit in Bamako. French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday responded to the militant video purporting to show six western hostages.
The leaders of Burkina Faso, Mauritania, France, Mali, Chad and Niger pose during G5 Sahel Summit in Bamako. French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday responded to the militant video purporting to show six western hostages.
Luc Gnago / Reuters

CAIRO, July 2 (Reuters) - Islamist militants operating in Mali released a video purporting to show six western hostages, ahead of a regional security summit in the West African country attended by France’s president on Sunday.

A narrator speaking in English said the 17-minute video showed hostages from South Africa, France, Colombia, Australia, Romania and Switzerland. The film bore the name of Al-Qaeda-affiliated militant group JNIM.

Reuters was unable to verify the authenticity of the footage, or when or where it was taken.

Romania’s foreign ministry said the Romanian man from the video, Iulian Ghergut, was kidnapped from a mine in Burkina Faso in April 2015.

French President Emmanuel Macron said that France would “put all our energy towards eradicating” those responsible for kidnapping Sophie Pétronin, the French hostage shown in the video. Pétronin was kidnapped in the city of Gao in Mali in December.

France’s Foreign Ministry declined to comment while the Swiss government said it was aware of the video and called for the release of its citizen.

Islamist militant groups, some with links to al Qaeda, seized Mali’s desert north in 2012.

A military intervention by former colonial power France drove them out of major cities a year later, but they continue to attack U.N. peacekeepers, Malian soldiers and civilian targets.

The violence has spilled over into neighboring countries in West Africa’s arid Sahel region and Paris has deployed thousands of French troops to combat Islamists under a cross-border operation known as Barkhane.

President Macron said France and its African partners must work together to wipe out Islamist militants, at the opening of the summit in Mali’s capital Bamako.

Leaders of the G5 Sahel bloc - Mali, Burkina Faso, Mauritania, Niger and Chad - were expected to launch a new multi-national force at the meeting.

(Reporting by Mohamed el Sherif, Additional reporting by Harry Pearl in Sydney, Sophie Louet in Paris and John Revill in Zurich, writing by Leigh Thomas in Paris; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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