Difference between revisions of "Christian volunteers"

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SEOUL, Aug. 28 — Representatives of [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] Taliban and the South Korean government said they had concluded face-to-face negotiations today over [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] fates of 19 South Korean church volunteers the Taliban has held captive in Afghanistan since mid-July.
 
  
But it was not immediately clear whether reports in Seoul and elsewhere that [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] Taliban had agreed to release the 19 hostages were accurate.
 
 
In Afghanistan, Qari Yusaf Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, confirmed that the talks in the central Afghan town of Ghazni had concluded, but he declined to give further information. He said he was not yet aware of how the talks had ended.
 
 
Separately, [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] Associated Press quoted Mr. Ahmadi as saying an agreement had been reached, but giving no further details.
 
 
South Korean officials indicated that they thought a deal for [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] release of the hostages had been sealed today when face-to-face talks resumed after several days of telephone contacts between [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] two sides.
 
 
“We welcome the agreement to release 19 South Koreans,” said Cheon Ho Seon, a spokesman for President Roh Moo Hyun, who has been under intense domestic pressure to win the safe return of [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] hostages, most of whom are women in their 20’s and 30’s. [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] hostage crisis has emerged as a major test for President Roh, whose term ends in February.
 
 
There was no indication that any hostages had actually been released, nor of when they would be. It was not known what the South Korean government may have offered to win their release.
 
 
[http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] Taliban, the militant fundamentalist Islamic group that formerly ruled Afghanistan, has reneged on promises to release hostages in [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] past.
 
 
Its fighters seized a total of 23 Korean Christian volunteers on July 19 as they traveled by bus from Kabul to the southern city of Kandahar. The captors killed two male hostages after a series of deadlines passed without their demands being met. But when the South Korean government entered direct negotiations with [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] militants last month, the Taliban freed two women in what they called a gesture of good will.
 
 
The talks in Ghazni took place in [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] offices of the Afghan Red Crescent, the local partner of [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] International Committee of the Red Cross, the A.P. said. [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] Red Cross also facilitated previous rounds of talks.
 
 
Members of the South Korean delegation were driven to the site of the meeting by Afghan intelligence officers, [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] news agency reported; later, [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] two Taliban representatives were taken to the compound in a Red Cross vehicle.
 
 
The insurgents demanded the withdrawal of [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] roughly 200 South Korean troops currently in Afghanistan, and the release of militant prisoners. South Korea responded that its troops were already scheduled to leave Afghanistan by the end of the year.
 
 
The South Korean side has also repeatedly appealed to the Afghan and American governments, which are holding Taliban prisoners, to show “flexibility” over [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] militants’ demands.
 
 
Officials in both Kabul and Washington said in response that they could not compromise their principle of refusing all concessions to terrorist demands. But [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] fact that the Seoul government made [http://www.isefc.com.cn/powerleveling.asp  powerleveling] public appeals may have demonstrated its sincerity to [http://www.isefc.com.cn/  wow gold] Taliban leaders.
 
 
David Rohde contributed reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan.
 

Latest revision as of 08:12, 28 August 2007