A video featuring two kidnapped Czech women surfaced in Pakistan and was released by the Czech government on Wednesday, Global Post reported.
The Czech Embassy in Islamabad received the video, recorded in August, showing Czech residents Antonie Chrastecka, 25, and Hana Humpalova, 24, who were taken on their way to India from a microbus in March.
"My health condition is very unstable mainly because of the food and water and it's getting worse," Humpalova said.
"I don't know how much time I have left because these guys take their final action from which you may not hear from me again," she added, saying she did not know the fate of her friend.
Towards the second part, Chrastecka pleads for help from the Czech government.
"I am asking the Czech government to help me go home soon," Chrastecka said. "Please make the biggest pressure to the Pakistani government to cooperate with my kidnappers. Please give them what they want."
Earlier this month, Czech President Milos Zeman said the government was in the middle of negotiating for the release of the two women. In addition, they released a video of the mothers of the Chrastecka and Humpalova saying they believed their daughters were being taken care of.
In June, footage sent to a television station in the Czech Republic showed two members of Al Qaeda demanding the release of Aafia Siddiqui -- a neuroscientist given 86 years in prison by the U.S. for shooting at FBI agents and troops in Afghanistan.
One month later, Al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri uploaded a video online that promised to set their "brothers" free, including Siddiqui and "every oppressed Muslim everywhere."