Taliban claim abduction of South Koreans, Germans
AFGHANISTAN: The Taliban claimed responsibility Friday for the kidnap
of 18 South Korean Christians and two German nationals, and said they
would only free the Germans if Berlin withdraws troops from Afghanistan.
“The Taliban have kidnapped the South Korean nationals. There are 18
South Koreans — three men and 15 women,” Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi
told AFP in a telephone call from an unknown location.
“They are with the Taliban now and they are safe and sound. They are
under investigation and once the investigation is over, the Taliban
leading council will make a final decision about their fate,” he said.
The South Koreans, who were abducted Thursday from the bus they were
travelling in in southern Afghanistan, belong to a church group engaged
in “evangelistic” and aid activity in one of Afghanistan’s most
insurgency-hit regions. Officials in Seoul said they included some
women.
“They were travelling in a bus. They were kidnapped by terrorists
yesterday (Thursday),” Ghazni province governor Mirajuddin Pattan told
AFP.
The governor expressed anger at the presence in his part of the
country of such a large number of foreign nationals, who are often prime
targets for Taliban militants and also criminals.
“They must have thought they are in Korea, not in war-torn
Afghanistan. They did not contact us, police or the security forces for
protection while travelling in this region,” he said.
The Germans were kidnapped a day earlier as they drove on the highway
linking Kabul with Kandahar in the insurgency-hit south.
Ahmadi said the Taliban would only free them if German troops pulled
out of Afghanistan and all the Taliban prisoners in Afghan prisons were
released.
Germany has some 3,000 troops stationed in the north of the country
as part of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force and is
being pressed to send more.
Islamist militants in March issued Berlin with an ultimatum to
withdraw its troops from Afghanistan.
In Seoul, Joseph Park, mission director of the Christian Council of
Korea, had earlier said he feared the ultra-Islamic Taliban movement was
behind the abduction of the Koreans.
“They are young Korean Christians who were engaged in short-term
evangelistic activity and service for children in Kandahar. I am afraid
they were captured by Taliban forces,” Park said.
The 20-strong group, in their 20s and early 30s, belongs to the
Saem-mul Community Church in Bundang on the outskirts of Seoul, said Oh
Soon-In, a senior church administrator.
“The group left here on July 13, led by Rev. Bae Hyong-Kyu, and was
supposed to return home on Monday next week,” Oh said. “We are in an
emergency conference.
We are quite concerned about their safety and whereabouts. We heard
that they disappeared while travelling from Kabul to Kandahar.”
“They did not inform police about their presence in the area. We have
found their empty bus and police have launched a major search operation
in the area,” provincial police chief Ali Shah Ahmadzai told AFP.
Kabul, Friday, AFP
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