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Afghanistan
Taliban agree to free S. Korean hostages
2007-08-28
GHAZNI, Afghanistan - The Taliban agreed Tuesday to free 19 South Korean church volunteers held hostage since July after the government in Seoul pledged to end all missionary work and keep a promise to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan by the end of the year. The Taliban originally seized 23 South Koreans, but have since killed two of the hostages and released two others.

Direct talks between Taliban negotiators and South Korean officials in central Afghanistan led to the agreement to end the hostage crisis, which had exposed the growing security problems facing Afghanistan.

Qari Yousef Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, said South Korean and Taliban delegates at face-to-face talks Tuesday in the central town of Ghazni had "reached an agreement" to free the captives.

South Korean presidential spokesman Cheon Ho-sun said the deal had been reached "on the condition that South Korea withdraws troops by the end of year and South Korea suspends missionary work in Afghanistan," he said.

In reaching the deal, South Korea did not appear to commit to anything it did not already plan to do. Seoul has already said it would withdraw its 200 non-combat troops by the end of the year and has also sought to prevent missionaries from causing trouble in countries where they were not wanted.

"We welcome the agreement to release 19 South Koreans," said Cheon.

The government and relatives of the hostages had insisted that the 19 kidnapped South Koreans were not missionaries, but were doing aid work.

The Taliban had initially demanded the withdrawal of South Korean troops from the country and the release of prisoners in exchange for freeing the hostages, but Afghan officials had ruled out any exchange, saying it would only encourage further kidnappings.

Taliban spokesmen have previously said they had no interest in a ransom payment.

Presidential spokesman Cheon told The Associated Press that he was informed by South Korean officials in Afghanistan that money was not discussed during negotiations with the Taliban, which were mediated by representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross. "We are sorry to the public for causing concern, but we thank the government officials for the (impending) release," Cha Sung-min, whose 32-year-old sister Cha Hye-jin was being held, told The Associated Press."Still, our hearts are broken as two died, so we convey our sympathy to the bereaved family members," said Cha, 31, who has served as a spokesman for the hostages' relatives.

Abductions have become a key insurgent tactic in recent months in trying to destabilize the country, targeting both Afghan officials and foreigners helping with reconstruction. A German engineer and four Afghan colleagues kidnapped a day before the South Koreans are still being held.
Posted by:tu3031

#4  I'll be interested in seeing what kinda reception they get when they get back to Seoul. I remember how the Japanese treated some of their yahoos that got themselves kidnapped and released when they got back. They weren't too happy as I remember...
Posted by: tu3031   2007-08-28 16:07  

#3  Pashtun shame culture vs Korean shame culture... Go!
Posted by: Excalibur   2007-08-28 16:03  

#2  Which, might not be so bad ITLR, as maybe the SoKors will find other, more covert ways to involve themselves in the GWOT...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2007-08-28 14:54  

#1  In reaching the deal, South Korea did not appear to commit to anything it did not already plan to do. Seoul has already said it would withdraw its 200 non-combat troops by the end of the year and has also sought to prevent missionaries from causing trouble in countries where they were not wanted.

This is eyewash. Anyone who has dealt with Koreans know that this is a major loss of face for them. Whether or not they planned to do it anyway, it appears to the world that they buckled under to blackmail from a bunch of savages and are shown to be cowards.
Posted by: RWV   2007-08-28 13:34  

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