JOHANNESBURG (AP) — The
United States did not know about talks on the reportedly imminent
release of a South African hostage who died in a U.S. raid on Al-Qaeda
militants in Yemen, the U.S. ambassador in South Africa said Monday.
Ambassador
Patrick Gaspard said American officials were "unaware of ongoing
negotiations that had any resolution" between the militants and Gift of
the Givers, a South African humanitarian relief group that had been
acting on behalf of the family of South African hostage Pierre Korkie.
Gaspard also said it was "not altogether clear" to him that the South
African government was even aware of the talks.
Korkie and
American hostage Luke Somers were killed Saturday during a U.S.-led
rescue attempt. Imtiaz Sooliman, founder of Gift of the Givers, has said
that Korkie was supposed to be released Sunday under a deal struck with
al-Qaida.Gaspard said the U.S. hadn't been informed about that. The U.S. decided to carry out the raid because the militants had threatened to kill Somers, Gaspard said.
"We were just completely unaware of those developments and had to act hastily," the ambassador said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.
He also said the United States had believed before the raid that there may have been "other hostages in the vicinity" of Somers' location, but did not have details on the nationalities of any captives.
"At no time was it apparent that Pierre Korkie was being held in the same space as the American photojournalist Luke Somers," the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria said in a statement.
U.S. President Barack Obama has said he ordered the raid because Somers was believed to be in "imminent danger" after al-Qaida released a video showing Somers and threatening to kill him in three days if the U.S. did not meet the group's unspecified demands.
Gaspard
cited comments by Sooliman, the aid group director, that there were no
guarantees that the negotiated release of Korkie would have proceeded
smoothly. However, the ambassador said the talks appeared to have made
progress.
"It does appear that they were pretty far down the track," Gaspard said.
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