A new video recording released Monday shows kidnapped British journalist Alan Johnston wearing an apparent explosives belt of the type suicide bombers use and warning it will be detonated if an attempt is made to free him by force.

The video, about one minute, 42 seconds long, was posted on a website that has been used by militant groups in the past. It opens with the title "Alan's Appeal" in both English and Arabic and features the logo of the Army of Islam, a shadowy group with apparent al-Qaeda links that has claimed responsibility for snatching Johnston, a British Broadcasting Corp. reporter.

Alan Johnston, pictured in this undated BBC image, was abducted in Gaza on March 12.Alan Johnston, pictured in this undated BBC image, was abducted in Gaza on March 12.
(BBC)

"Captors tell me that very promising negotiations were ruined when the Hamas movement and the British government decided to press for a military solution to this kidnapping," Johnston says in the recording, looking nervous and stressed.

"And the situation is now very serious, as you can see."

Johnston is seen wearing a red sweater with a blue and white checked vest strapped around his body — the apparent bomb belt.

"I have been dressed in what is an explosive belt, which the kidnappers say will be detonated if there is an attempt to storm the area," he continues. "They say they are ready to turn the hide-out into what they describe as a death zone if there is an attempt to free me by force."

Johnston was standing and shaking his head as he spoke. Light entered the room from above, and an Arabic translation was provided on the screen. Nobody else appears in the video.

"I do appeal to the Hamas movement and the British government not, not to, resort to the tactics of force in an effort to end this," he says in a jittery tone.

"I'd ask the BBC and anyone in Britain who wishes me well to support me in that appeal," he says. "It seems the answer is to return to negotiations, which I am told are very close to achieving a deal."

There was no immediate comment from the BBC or the British government.

It is not known when the video was made. Deposed Palestinian Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas referred to it in a two-hour speech Sunday in Gaza City, but it was not posted to the website until early Monday.

Johnston was seized from a Gaza street on March 12. His captors have previously said they want a Palestinian militant jailed in Britain to be released in exchange for Johnston.

June 1 video confirmed Johnston alive

The first time Johnston was seen since his abduction was in a video posted on another website on June 1. In that tape, the journalist appeared calm and said his captors had treated him well.

He also criticized Britain for its role in Israel's creation and blamed British and American troops for the spiralling violence in Iraq.

Since Hamas took over the Gaza Strip earlier this month, Hamas leaders have been saying that Johnston's release was imminent. Hamas officials have indicated they know where he is, but have not moved in for fear of harming him.

Hamas leader Mahmoud Zahar said Saturday that Johnston's captors, from the heavily armed Doghmush clan, were hesitant to release him, fearing retaliation if he was freed.

On Sunday, Khaled Abu Hilal, spokesman for the Interior Ministry in Gaza, said that concern for the life of the journalist was complicating efforts to free him.

Johnston had reported from Gaza since 2005 and was the only foreign journalist to remain based there after Palestinian infighting erupted last year. There has been a series of kidnappings of foreign journalists in Gaza in the past two years, but Johnston's captivity has been the longest.