Taliban frees 12 of 19 Korean hostages

The Taliban has freed 12 South Korean hostages in Afghanistan, a day after reaching a deal with Korean and Indonesian negotiators…

The Taliban has freed 12 South Korean hostages in Afghanistan, a day after reaching a deal with Korean and Indonesian negotiators on the release of the 19 Christian volunteers.

This combination photo released from Sammul church shows (from L to R) Ahn Hye-jin, Lee Jeong-ran and Han Ji-young, the South Korean hostages released by the Taliban today. Reuters/Yonhap
This combination photo released from Sammul church shows (from L to R) Ahn Hye-jin, Lee Jeong-ran and Han Ji-young, the South Korean hostages released by the Taliban today. Reuters/Yonhap

Three South Korean women were released first, followed by four women and a man - handed over to members of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Ghazni province, witnesses said.

A third batch comprising three women and a man were released this evening, they said. Wearing long, traditional headscarves, the three women who were first to be freed wept as they sat in an ICRC vehicle.

A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousuf, said by telephone he expected all of the hostages to be free by tomorrow. The insurgents seized 23 Korean Christian volunteers on July 19th from a bus in Ghazni province and initially demanded the release of Taliban members held prisoner by the Afghan government.

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Two male hostages were killed by their captors early on in the crisis. The Taliban released two women as a gesture of goodwill during an initial round of talks and said yesterday they had reached a deal on the release of the remaining 19.

A Taliban representative said today they dropped the demand for Taliban prisoners to be released after they realised South Korea could not force the Afghan government to free anyone.

South Korea's presidential Blue House said the final agreement was on condition it withdraw its troops from Afghanistan within the year and stopped its nationals doing missionary work in Afghanistan.

However, South Korea had already decided before the crisis to withdraw its contingent of about 200 engineers and medical staff from Afghanistan by the end of 2007.

Since the hostages were taken it has banned its nationals from travelling there. A spokesman for South Korea's president, Chon Ho-seon, did not respond to questions at a news briefing in Seoul today on whether a ransom was part of the deal but said South Korea had done what was needed.