Taliban, Afghans seek venue for hostage talks
AFGHANISTAN: The Afghan government and Taliban kidnappers
sought a venue for negotiations to try to free 21 South Korean Christian
hostages held for more than two weeks, the provincial police chief said.
A South Korean delegation was in Ghazni province, southwest of Kabul,
where the church volunteers were snatched, seeking direct talks with the
kidnappers.
But Seoul has told the insurgents there is a limit to what it can do
since it has no power to concede the main Taliban demand for the release
of rebel prisoners in Afghan jails.
“Talks are going on to find an agreement on location,” Ghazni police
chief Ali Shah Ahmadzai told reporters.
“We are in favour of dialogue, that’s what logic requires. If that
doesn’t work, then force may be used,” he said. “If the Taliban do not
accept dialogue, that means they do not want this issue to be resolved
peacefully.”
There has been a build-up Afghan forces in Ghazni since the hostages
were hauled off a bus on the main road south from Kabul on July 20, but
a rescue bid would be fraught with danger.
“Launching an operation to rescue the hostages is not up for
discussion, the presence of our troops there is not for launching rescue
operations,” said Defence Ministry spokesman General Zahir Azimy.
The Taliban want to hold negotiations in an area they control, and
vouched for the safety of the Korean delegates, a Taliban spokesman said
on Friday. Otherwise, the insurgents needed U.N. security guarantees
should the Koreans want negotiations to take place outside
Taliban-controlled areas.
A U.N. spokesman in Kabul said the world body had yet to receive any
request for assistance in holding the talks. The governor of Ghazni
accused Pakistani Taliban working with agents of neighbouring Pakistan’s
state Inter Service Intelligence (ISI) of holding the captives.
“In the beginning it was the local Taliban, but after a few days,
Pakistani Taliban and ISI officers disguised as Taliban arrived in the
region and they took control,” Merajuddin Pattan told Reuters.
Afghan officials often accuse the ISI of secretly supporting and
harbouring Taliban insurgents. Pakistan denies the charge.
The ISI backed the Taliban movement as it rose to take over most of
Afghanistan in the mid-1990s, but dropped its support in the wake of the
Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
Police chief Ahmadzai said authorities had managed to send medicines
to the 18 women and three men held by the Taliban in small groups at
different locations in Ghazni province.
But the Taliban had rejected a request from a group of private Afghan
doctors to visit the captives, Ahmadzai said.
The Taliban have said two of the women are seriously ill.
Ghazni, Sunday, Reuters |