SKorea urges release of Afghan hostages
Kabul, July 21: South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun today called for the release of 23 countrymen held hostage by Taliban fighters in Afghanistan, saying they were medical volunteers.
The call came as the Taliban threatened to kill two German hostages seized this week if their demand to free all of the Islamic movement's members in Afghan prisons was not met by an 1300 hrs IST deadline.
The Taliban is also demanding the withdrawal of all German troops from Afghanistan.
Insurgents kidnapped 23 South Koreans from a bus in southwest Ghazni province on Thursday in what was the biggest group of foreigners seized so far in the militant campaign to oust the government and its Western backers.
''The kidnappers must release our people as soon as possible, and safely. In any case, valuable lives should not be damaged,'' Roh told a news conference in Seoul.
A South Korean Foreign Ministry official had said yesterday about 20 South Korean Christian volunteers were feared to have been kidnapped by Taliban insurgents.
Last year, the South Korean government tried to stop a group of 2,000 Korean Christians travelling to Afghanistan for a peace conference, fearing for their safety.
But 900 of them still came to Afghanistan, causing an uproar in the staunchly Muslim country -- where many accused them of being evangelical missionaries -- before they were all deported.
South Korea has no combat troops in Afghanistan, but has a contingent of 200 engineers, doctors and medical staff. Roh said they would remain in Afghanistan until their mission was complete.
''The troops in Afghanistan are non-combatant, doing medical and support work. They have been trying to treat hundreds of people everyday and help reconstruct Afghanistan by building welfare facilities and bridges, and their mission is nearing an end,'' Roh said.
Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousuf told Reuters from an undisclosed location that the group's leadership council would decide on Saturday the fate of the Koreans, who included 18 women.
He said the two Germans along with six Afghans who were abducted from their vehicle southwest of Kabul on Wednesday were in good condition.
''The Taliban leadership council has set 12:00 (local time) as deadline for the two German hostages. And if the deadline is not met, we will kill them,'' he told Reuters by telephone.
The Afghan government said it was not aware of the Taliban ultimatum on the German hostages and German officials could not be contacted immediately for comment.
The Afghan government drew stern criticism for releasing a group of Taliban prisoners in return for the freedom of an Italian journalist kidnapped in March and the government then said it would not deal with the Islamist movement.
Germany has 2,200 troops serving under NATO in Afghanistan.
Reuters>


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