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UN negotiating Syria hostage demands: Fiji

Fiji's army chief says Al-Qaeda linked Syria rebels have made several demands as they hold captive more than 40 peacekeepers.

Fiji has revealed for the first time the demands that are being made by Al-Qaeda linked Syria rebels who took more than 40 UN peacekeepers hostage in the Golan Heights.

Fiji army chief Mosese Tikoitoga says the rebels want their organisation, the Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front, to be removed from the UN's list of terrorist organisations.

He says they also want humanitarian aid sent to a small town which is an Al-Nusra stronghold just outside Damascus and are demanding compensation for three of their fighters who had been hurt in recent days.

"These are the official demands that are being quoted to the UN for the release of our boys," Tikoitoga told reporters in Suva.

Unconfirmed reports in Fiji's media said the hostage takers were also demanding the release of Abu Mussab al-Suri, also known as Mustafa Setmariam Nasar, an Al-Qaeda leader who was arrested in Pakistan in 2005 and is now being held by Syrian authorities.

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Tikoitoga says there are 45 troops in the captured peacekeeping deployment, not 44 or 43 as authorities originally stated. He released the names of the soldiers and said the Fiji government was operating a crisis centre for their families in Suva.

He said a UN negotiation team had arrived in the Golan Heights from New York to take over negotiations with the rebels.

"Unfortunately we have not made any improvement in the situation, our troops remain at an undisclosed located, the rebels are not telling us where they are," he said.

"But they continue to reassure us that they're being well looked after, they're being fed well and are being kept safe. They've also told us that they've been taken out of battle (combat) areas."

The Fijians were captured last Wednesday when the rebels stormed a Golan Heights crossing.

Another group of 72 Philippine peacekeepers refused to surrender and eventually escaped from two camps on the Syrian side of the border after the rebels besieged them.

The soldiers are serving in the UN Disengagement Observer Force (UNDOF) stationed in a buffer zone to monitor a ceasefire between Syria and Israel since 1974.


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