KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghan police discovered the bullet-riddled body of a
South Korean hostage Wednesday as the Taliban released eight other captives who
were taken to a US military base, officials said.
Because of a recent spike in kidnappings -- including an attempt against
a Danish citizen Wednesday -- police announced foreigners were no longer
allowed to leave the Afghan capital without their permission.
A relative of South Koreans kidnapped in Afghanistan reacts
as they watching TV news reports on negotiations in Seoul, Wednesday, July
25, 2007. Taliban militants claimed they shot and killed one Korean
hostage on Wednesday while a group of abductees was freed and taken to a
US military base, officials said. [AP]
|
The male South Korean victim was found with 10 bullet holes in his head,
chest and stomach in the Mushaki area of Qarabagh district in Ghazni province,
the region where 23 South Koreans were kidnapped last week, said Abdul Rahman, a
police officer.
A police official, who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity
of the situation, said militants told him the hostage was sick and couldn't walk
and was therefore shot.
Two Western officials said some of the 23 hostages had been released. One of
the officials, who asked not to be identified because he wasn't authorized to
share the information, said six females and two males were taken to the main US
base in Ghazni.
An Afghan official involved in the negotiations earlier said a large sum of
money would be paid to free eight of the hostages. The official spoke on
condition he not be identified, citing the matter's sensitivity. No other
officials would confirm the account.
Foreign governments are suspected to have paid for the release of hostages in
Afghanistan in the past, but have either kept it quiet or denied it outright.
The Taliban at one point demanded that 23 jailed militants be freed in exchange
for the Koreans.
The South Koreans, including 18 women, were kidnapped July 19 while riding a
bus through Ghazni province on the Kabul-Kandahar highway, Afghanistan's main
thoroughfare. Fourteen Koreans apparently remain in Taliban hands.
South Korea has banned its citizens from traveling to Afghanistan in the wake
of the kidnappings. Seoul also asked Kabul not to issue visas to South Koreans
and to block their entry into the country.
The South Korean church that the abductees attend has said it will suspend at
least some of its volunteer work in Afghanistan. It also stressed that the
Koreans abducted were not involved in any Christian missionary work, saying they
provided only medical and other volunteer aid to distressed people in the
war-ravaged country.
Two Germans were also kidnapped last week. One was found dead and the other
apparently remains captive. A Danish reporter of Afghan origin escaped a kidnap
attempt in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday, the Danish Foreign Ministry said.
The unidentified man "was close to being caught but managed to get away and
reach a local police station," Foreign Ministry spokesman Ole Neustrup said. The
Dane was first reported to be German but that report was false, Khan said.
The series of recent kidnappings prompted the Afghan government to forbid
foreigners living in Kabul from leaving the city without police permission.
Police said officials stationed at checkpoints at the city's main gates would
stop foreigners from leaving the capital unless they informed officials 24 hours
in advance of their travel plans, said Esmatullah Dauladzai, Kabul's provincial
police chief.
Elsewhere, NATO's International Security Assistance Force said a soldier was
killed in eastern Afghanistan on Wednesday by a rocket-propelled grenade. ISAF
didn't release the soldier's nationality, but the majority of troops in the east
are American.
Britain said one of its soldiers was killed and two others injured when an
explosion struck their vehicle in southern Helmand province on Wednesday.
The US-led coalition said 20 suspected Taliban militants were killed
Wednesday after a failed ambush on coalition and Afghan troops in Kandahar
province.