MANILA: Al-Qa’eda linked Islamist militants in the Philippines said on Thursday they will kill one of two German captives on October 17 unless their demands are met.

Rebels from the Abu Sayyaf group captured the two Germans sailing on a yacht from the western island of Palawan island to the eastern Malaysian state of Sabah in April.

The militants are demanding a 250 million pesos (Dh20.57 million) ransom and for Germany to stop supporting U.S.-led air strikes against Islamic State militants in Syria.

“Today, we are going to tell you about the ultimatum,” a Muslim rebel who identified himself as Abu Rami and said he was a spokesman for Abu Sayyaf, said in a telephone call to reporters based in Zamboanga City in the south.

“After October 17, 2014, Friday, at 3pm, you will not see one of them alive. It will be seen by the public so that we can show that we are not playing games.”

Philippine security officials say the Germans are being held in the jungles of Jolo, a remote southern island and hotbed of Islamist militants in the mainly Catholic country.

The Abu Sayyaf group has a record of kidnappings, killings and bombings. The militants are known to be holding several other foreigners hostage.

It is not clear if the militants have contacts with Daesh (self-proclaimed Islamic State) fighters in the Middle East.

Germany has ruled out taking part in air strikes against Daesh targets in the Middle East, but it did break a post-World War Two taboo on sending weapons to active conflict zones by agreeing to arm Kurdish fighters battling the militants in Iraq.