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Philippine soldiers on the way to collect the Germans. Photo: AP

Militants release two Germans threatened with beheading in the Philippines

Two Germans kidnapped and held for six months in the southern Philippines were released yesterday by a militant group just hours after it had threatened to behead one of them if no ransom payment was made.

AP

Two Germans kidnapped and held for six months in the southern Philippines were released yesterday by a militant group just hours after it had threatened to behead one of them if no ransom payment was made, the Philippine defence chief said.

The Abu Sayyaf group released Stefan Okonek and Henrike Dielen on southern Jolo island, Defence Secretary Voltaire Gazmin said.

Abu Sayyaf spokesman Abu Rami told radio station DXRZ in southern Zamboanga City that his group received 250 million pesos (HK$43 million) in ransom. He did not say who paid it.

Gazmin said he was "not privy" to information about any ransom payment.

"We're happy they're safe. I hope there will be no more kidnappings," Gazmin said.

Abu Sayyaf gunmen seized Okonek and Dielen last April from a yacht between Malaysia's Sabah state on Borneo island and the western Philippine province of Palawan. They were taken by boat to Sulu province, about 950km south of Manila, where militants have other hostages.

Abu Rami had threatened to behead Okonek yesterday if there was no ransom payment. The group also demanded the withdrawal of German support for US-led air strikes against Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

In a call to the radio station, Rami said Okonek and Dielen were released to a negotiator in Patikul township on Jolo island, an Abu Sayyaf stronghold.

"The 250 million pesos arrived, no more, no less," he said.

In an interview with DXRZ allowed by the militants earlier this week, Okonek, 71, who identified himself as a medical doctor, pleaded, "please do everything to get us out of here".

He said he was speaking from inside a 5 metre-by-3 metre "grave" the gunmen had dug for him in the jungle. He said he and Dielen had been separated by the militants about a day earlier.

"They pushed me inside this hole and I'm sitting with 10 men around me all day, 24 hours a day. I don't get enough to eat. I have lost already 20 pounds and I am very weak," he said.

The military says Abu Sayyaf is still holding several other hostages in Sulu's jungles, including two European birdwatchers who were kidnapped two years ago. They have been using the birdwatchers as "human shields" during military attacks, according to regional military commander Lieutenant General Rustico Guerrero.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Germans freed after militants' beheading threat
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