2014-12-26 08:59
Amman - The father of a Jordanian pilot captured by Islamic State
fighters after his plane crashed in Syria said he did not consider his
son a hostage and called on his captors to treat him as a "guest".
Jordan
is one of several Arab countries participating in the US-led military
mission to bomb fighters from the Islamist group, which holds territory
in both Syria and Iraq.
First Lieutenant Muath al-Kasaesbeh, 27,
was captured after his jet crashed in northeast Syria on Wednesday
during a bombing mission against the militants. The US military, which
commands the operation, said enemy fire was not the cause of the crash.
Kasaesbeh,
who comes from a prominent Jordanian Sunni Muslim family, is the first
pilot from the international coalition known to have been captured by
Islamic State.
The Sunni Muslim jihadist group has a history of killing enemy soldiers
that it captures on the battlefield and beheading Western civilians that
it takes hostage. Many of the captives it has killed are Shi'ites or
non-Muslims, but the group has also executed Sunnis for fighting
alongside its enemies.
His family has pleaded for mercy.
"I do not want to describe him as a hostage. I call him a guest," his father, Saif al-Kasaesbeh, told Reuters Television.
"He
is a guest among brothers of ours in Syria Islamic State. I ask them -
by the name of God and with the dignity of the prophet Mohammed, peace
be upon him - to receive him as a guest of his hosts and treat him
well," he said.
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