Australia firm in face of second hostage

The family of an Australian man held hostage by Iraqi militants made another televised plea for his freedom this morning after…

The family of an Australian man held hostage by Iraqi militants made another televised plea for his freedom this morning after his captors released a second video demanding Australia start withdrawing its troops within 72 hours.

Al Jazeera television broadcast on Friday part of the militants' new tape of Douglas Wood, 63, an engineer who lives in California and is married to an American. His head was shaven and he looked despondent as he apparently pleaded for his life. Two masked militants stood by with guns pointed towards the hostage in the video which carried the name of the group -- Shura Council of the Mujahideen in Iraq.

"Douglas is a warm man of generous heart and spirit. His work is to help the people of Iraq towards a better life. We respect the people of Iraq, their patriotic spirit and their right to independence," Wood's brother Malcolm said in a televised statement on Saturday to be shown on Al Jazeera.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer stood firm on Canberra's refusal to give in to the militants holding Wood. "The important thing is that we don't look as though we're starting to cave in and give in to demands," he told Australian radio on Saturday.

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"If you give in to demands ... more people eventually ... will be taken hostage and further demands made, so it's important we be strong and that, for the government's part, it just continues working at trying to get Douglas out."

Downer has said that Wood may have been kidnapped from his Baghdad apartment up to two days before the first two-minute video was delivered to news agencies in Baghdad on Sunday. That video showed Wood pleading at gunpoint for Australia, Britain and the United States to withdraw troops from Iraq.

Australia, a staunch U.S. ally, was among the first to join the war on Iraq two years ago. A new batch of 450 Australian troops are due to arrive in southern Iraq in the coming weeks to provide security and train the Iraqi army.

They will take the total number of Australian troops in and around Iraq to about 1,400. Opinions polls showed in May last year that nearly two-thirds of Australians believed the war on Iraq was unjustified.

Half of Australians believed it was not worth sending troops to Iraq, while 40 percent backed the conservative government's decision. Australia angered Spain and the Philippines last year when it accused them of encouraging terrorists by pulling their troops out of Iraq. The Philippines brought their troops home early to save the life of a Filipino hostage.