Taliban begins hostage handover

Posted 2007/08/29 23:23
Taliban begins hostage handover




The Taliban say another group of hostages will be released onWednesday [AFP]
The Taliban has freed three of its remaining 19 South Korean hostages and has told Al Jazeera that five more will be released shortly.
 
Al Jazeera's Afghanistan team was instructed to head to Qalaa Qadi district near the town of Ghazni to witness the release on Wednesday of the three women, who were handed over to tribal mediators in the area.




The hostages were handed to the International Committee of the Red Cross, whose members gave them brief medical checks in Ghazni, Alan Fisher, Al Jazeera's correspondent, said.







He said the women, named as Ahn Hye-Jinm, Lee Jeung-Ran and Han Ji-Young, were then driven to the South Korean embassy in Kabul.
 
Cho Hee-yong, a South Korean foreign ministry spokesman, confirmed that the three had been handed over to Korean custody. They are apparently in normal health, he said.
 
The Taliban began freeing the Christian volunteers under an agreement reached a day earlier in face-to-face talks with the Seoul government, brokered by the Red Crescent.

 

Under the terms of the deal, South Korea agreed to end missionary activities by Christian groups in Afghanistan.

 

Fisher said: "We have been told by the Taliban that a further group of five - four women and one man - will be released by the Taliban within the hour."

 

Hostages' return

 

Relatives of the hostages, who erupted in cheers on hearing news of the agreement, are now anxiously awaiting the hostages' return.

 

"It is like a dead child is coming back to life," Lee Hyoen-Ja, a relative of one of the kidnapped Christian aid workers, told JoongAng Daily on Wedneday.

 

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Seo Jeung-Bae, whose son and daughter were among the hostages, said: "I want to see them and hug them hard now.

  

"I had not doubted for one moment that the Taliban would return my children some day, as the Taliban are also human beings and have their own families."

 

At Seoul's Saemmul Church, which sent the volunteers to Afghanistan, officials said the focus now would be on looking after the released hostages and their families.

 

"Our work for now will be to make sure the freed hostages return safely and have the time to recover, and to make sure the family members of the two who were sacrificed are comforted," Bang Yong-kyun, pastor, said.

 

The group of 23 volunteers from the church were seized on July 19 from a bus as they travelled through Ghazni province.

 

Rethink

 

The Taliban killed two male hostages early on in the crisis, but released two women as a gesture of goodwill during a first round of negotiations.

 

As news of the release spread, other South Korean churches said the kidnapping crisis had led them to rethink their evangelical activities.

 

Relatives reacted with joy after getting news
that an agreement had been reached [AFP]

The National Council of Churches in Korea, one of the largest groups representing the country's Protestants, said in a statement it would abide by the government's pledge to end missionary work in Afghanistan.

 

"Through this incident, we will look back on the Korean churches' overseas volunteer and missionary work, and make this an opportunity to bring about more effective and safer volunteer and missionary work," it said.

 

Another Seoul-based Christian aid group, The Frontiers, said all its short-term volunteers in Afghanistan had pulled out of the country and two long-term volunteers are about to return.

 

Following Tuesday's talks with South Korean officials, the Taliban said they would release the 19 hostages provided Seoul pulls out its troops and stops Korean missionary work in Afghanistan by the end of this year.


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