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Luke Somers, U.S. hostage, threatened in Yemen al-Qaeda video

Al-Qaeda's branch in Yemen has threatened an American hostage kidnapped over a year ago, giving Washington three days to meet unspecified demands and denouncing U.S. actions in the Arabian Peninsula country in a new video released Thursday.

Luke Somers says in video his life is in danger

This image made from video posted online by militants shows Luke Somers, an American photojournalist born in Britain and held hostage by al-Qaeda's affiliate in Yemen. (Associated Press)

Al-Qaeda's branch in Yemen has threatened an American hostage kidnapped over a year ago, giving Washington three days to meet unspecified demands and denouncing U.S. actions in the Arabian Peninsula country in a new video released Thursday.

The hostage, identified as 33-year-old Luke Somers, an American photojournalist born in Britain, is featured for the first time in the video, which was posted on the al-Qaeda offshoot's Twitter account. It was first reported by SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant sites.

The footage apparently seeks to mimic hostage videos released by al-Qaeda's rivals from the Islamic State group, which has threatened — and later beheaded — several American and British hostages in the aftermath of a summer blitz that captured much of Iraq and Syria. The IS fighters have at times battled al-Qaeda and prompted defections among their rivals.

Somers kidnapped in Sept. 2013

Somers was kidnapped in Sept, 2013 from a street in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, where he had worked as a freelancer for the Yemen Times. Since his capture, Yemeni journalists have been holding sit-ins in Sanaa to press the government to seek his release.

Somers was likely among a group of hostages who were the objective of a joint rescue mission by U.S operation forces and Yemeni troops last month that freed eight captives in a remote corner of Yemen's Hadramawt province.

At the time, a Yemeni official said the mission, carried out in a vast desert area dotted with dunes called Hagr al-Saiaar, an al-Qaeda safe haven not far from the Saudi border, failed to liberate five other hostages. Among them were an American journalist and a Briton who were moved elsewhere by their al-Qaeda captors days before the raid. The American was not identified by name and Yemen did not officially confirm the participation of U.S. commandos in the rescue mission — a rare instance of U.S. forces intervening on the ground in Yemen.

In the three minute video, Somers appears somber and gives a brief statement in English, asking for help.

"It's now been well over a year since I've been kidnapped in Sanaa," Somers said. "Basically, I'm looking for any help that can get me out of this situation. I'm certain that my life is in danger. So as I sit here now, I ask, if anything can be done, please let it be done. Thank you very much."

Before Somers' statement, the video shows local al-Qaeda commander Nasser bin Ali al-Ansi, reading in Arabic and speaking about alleged American "crimes against" the Muslim world.

Al-Ansi criticizes U.S-led airstrikes against the Islamic State group and President Barack Obama for his "latest foolish action," referring to the "failed operation" in Hadramawt. He says an "elite group of mujahedeen," or holy warriors, were killed in the U.S. raid.

U.S. has three days to meet al-Qaeda's demands or 'American hostage held by us will meet his inevitable fate'-  al-Qaeda commander Nasser bin Ali al-Ansi,

He also warned the U.S. against more "stupidities," referring to future attempts to rescue hostages.

Al-Ansi gives the U.S. three days to meet al-Qaeda's demands or "otherwise, the American hostage held by us will meet his inevitable fate," without elaborating or explicitly saying they would kill their captive.

Al-Ansi also does not specify the group's demands but says Washington is "aware" of them.

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, as the Yemeni group is known, is considered by the U.S. to be the world's most dangerous branch of the terror network and has been linked to several failed attacks on the U.S. homeland.

Abduction of foreigners has been common in impoverished Yemen, troubled both by al-Qaeda and the advance of Shiite rebels, but while kidnapping for ransom was common in the past, threatening a hostage's life appears to be a shift in the al-Qaida branch's tactics.

A tribal leader in Hagr al-Saiaar said he has learned from local tribal mediators that U.S. officials have rejected their mediation offers in hostage cases. A second tribal figure, also close to tribal mediators, said outreach efforts to Qatar, a traditional mediator in the region, went nowhere.