Friends and former colleagues of a U.S. aid worker whom the Islamic State group (IS) group has threatened to execute appealed Saturday for his release, during a news conference they held in the northern city of Tripoli.
Twenty-six-year-old Peter Kassig, who converted to Islam and took the Muslim name Abdel Rahman, has been an IS captive since 2013.
"We call on IS... to free Abdel Rahman," said Firas Agha, a Syrian refugee living in Tripoli who shared a flat with Kassig when he lived and worked in the northern coastal city.
"Islam does not allow Muslim to kill Muslim, especially if the Muslim in question has done good work," he said.
In an October 3 video showing British aid worker Alan Henning's beheading, the threat was made that Kassig would be next.
The group says its brutal executions are in retaliation for U.S.-led air strikes targeting jihadists in Syria and Iraq.
Before traveling to rebel-held areas in Syria, Kassig worked in hospitals and clinics treating Syrians forced to flee their war-torn country to neighboring Lebanon and Turkey.
He made two separate trips into rebel-held areas of Syria before traveling to the eastern province of Deir Ezzor in autumn 2013, when he was taken hostage.
Kassig "was a very enthusiastic young man, so much that he would help refugees out of his own pocket," said Agha.
The former U.S. soldier left the army after fighting in Iraq.
"He told us many times about his dismay over what he saw, both in terms of the killing and destruction," said Agha.
Another Syrian, Dr. Ahmed Obeid, told reporters Kassig "cared a lot about giving humanitarian and medical aid to Syrian refugees."
A third refugee, who identified himself only as Mohammed and who now lives in Switzerland, made an emotional appeal.
With the green, black, red and white flag Syrians opposed to President Bashar Assad's regime have adopted behind him, Mohammed said he warned Kassig about returning to Syria because he sensed his life would be in danger.
"But Abdel Rahman was convinced of the need to help the Syrians inside Syria, because they need that," he said.
Hostages threatened at the end of four previous IS videos have all subsequently been murdered.
Activists say the jihadists are holding hundreds of hostages, mostly Syrians.
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