Saturday, November 07, 2009 Last Update:07:14 pm ET

World|Wed, Jul. 25 2007 08:55 AM EDT

Taliban: 1 Korean Christian Hostage Killed

By Michelle Vu|Christian Post Reporter

One of the 23 Korean Christian hostages in Afghanistan was killed Wednesday and more would be killed if the demands of the Taliban were not met, said a purported spokesman for the militant group.

  • korean christian hostage
    (Photo: Christian Post / Christian Today Korea, Song Kyung-ho)
    A family member of one of the kidnapped South Korean Christians in Afghanistan cries after hearing that negotiations were under way to secure the release of the captives.

"Since Kabul's administration did not listen to our demand and did not free our prisoners, the Taliban shot dead a male Korean hostage,” Qari Yousef Ahmadi, the alleged news representative for the Taliban, told Reuters by phone from an unknown location.

Ahmadi said earlier that the insurgents would kill “a few” of the hostages before 5:30 a.m. EDT after talks over the fate of the 23 South Korean Christian hostages had stalled. Three deadlines have passed since the Koreans were abducted last Thursday, with the latest being Tuesday 10:30 a.m. EDT.

“The Taliban have lost their patience with it all so they will be killed…because a lot of time has passed since the deadline and there has been no response,” Ahmadi told AP by satellite phone before the news of a first killing was reported. “The Taliban takes no responsibility for the killing.”

The threat came as a surprise to Ali Shah Ahmadzai, the police chief of the Ghazni province where the hostages were captured, who said negotiations were moving in a positive direction.

“I don’t know why they’ve suddenly changed their mind,” Ahmadzai said, according to AP. Several of Ahmadi’s past statements have turned out false or contradicted other statements by Taliban, leading some to question the reliability of his information.

“My message to the Taliban is to use tolerance and be patient,” the provincial police chief said. “This (killing hostages) is against the Afghan culture.”

It has been nearly a week since the group of South Korean Christians was kidnapped while riding in a bus through the Ghazni province – one of the most insurgency-hit regions in Afghanistan – as they made their way toward the southern city of Kandahar.

The 23 South Koreans, which include 18 women, work at an aid organization in Kandahar, said Sidney Serena, a political affairs officer at the South Korean Embassy in Kabul.

Despite accusations that the Koreans were on an evangelistic mission, South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun as well as the senior pastor of the hostages’ home church, the Rev. Park Eun-jo, emphasized that the volunteers were there to provide free medical or educational services with no missionary intentions.

It is illegal to share the Gospel in Afghanistan under the Taliban.

“There are some who misunderstand us but we didn’t attempt any aggressive missionary activities,” said the Rev. Park on Monday, according to the Korean newspaper The Hankyoreh.

“We love Afghanistan and respect Muslim culture. We want to continue our community service work in medical facilities and schools in a way that is desirable to the people of Afghanistan,” said Park.

South Korean Foreign Minister Song Min-Soon, who is currently in Afghanistan for negotiations, said the hostages are held in different locations and had no health problems, according to AP.

The Taliban is demanding for the Afghan government to release a similar number of Taliban prisoners and for South Korea to remove its 200 troops from the country in exchange for the captives.

Thus far, the Afghan government has not agreed to release the prisoners and South Korea has emphasized that the troops will leave Afghanistan by the end of the year as scheduled. It was also noted that the Korean troops are mostly working on humanitarian projects.

Meanwhile, Christians worldwide have been called to lift up prayers for the abducted group.

“We pray that our Korean brothers, sisters and their families will experience a special nearness of God to them and find comfort in the knowledge of His power in their time of anguish,” said the Rev. Dr. Geoff Tunnicliffe, the international director of the World Evangelical Alliance.

“We pray for the government officials and kidnappers who are in negotiations, may they agree to a peaceful resolution quickly and allow the hostages to be reunited with their families,” he concluded.

The kidnapping of the 23 South Korean Christians was the largest abduction of a group of foreigners in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001.

Christian Post reporter Eric Young in Washington contributed to this article.

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  • Fri Jul 27, 2007 1:50 am Agree: 4   Disagree: 2

    J.... you know, maybe they have no right to be there. and, maybe you're right, but In the eyes of the taliban we or any other nation such as south korea has no right to be there. Does that mean we should let their problems and misunderstanding of the world build up. Now take a look at the American History. We too face many persecutions, whether it be racism, religous rights, human rights, or just plain misunderstanding of cultures ethnicity... what I'm trying to say is, it takes action and boldness to face those problems and by doing so we hope to open their eyes and have them realize on how wrong the persecution and killings are. it takes someone to stand up for thos rights to make a difference... it may even take sacrifices to win over their hearts. for example, If martin luther king never have taken the stand where would our nation be. You know, I don't care if the reason was evangilism or aid, both does not pose a harm to the government. As christians we are not here to overthrow the government or culture. As christians we are merely expressing and showing our love and concerns to the world just as how God has shown us when He sends his one and only son to die on the cross for our sins, our mistakes. now tell me, is it wrong for us christians to show and teach love for those who need it.

  • Thu Jul 26, 2007 7:59 pm Agree: 4   Disagree: 1

    I hope don't sound confrontational when I ask this but, are you a Christian, J?

  • J »
    Thu Jul 26, 2007 7:50 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 4

    Hasn't it become glaringly apparent that the inability of certain nations/groups/ideologies to avoid those troubled areas of the world led to much greater turmoil, conflict and bloodshed? History is always there staring us in the face and we just turn and ignore it. And regardless of whether or not their presence there was for medical or educational or religious purposes, they do not belong there. Of course, if sacrificing your own life for the welfare of complete strangers who despise you and want to kill you seems like a worthy endeavor to you, then go for it. And as a horrible thing as it is, don't expect my sympathies when you're beheaded in the desert.

  • Thu Jul 26, 2007 4:14 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    There's a lot of problems in the world, J. And while it would have been safer for them to serve in their homeland, if everyone avoided the troubled areas of the world, wouldn't they just be even more troubled?

  • Wed Jul 25, 2007 3:04 pm Agree: 6   Disagree: 0

    ::begin article quote::
    The 23 South Koreans, which include 18 women, work at an aid organization in Kandahar, said Sidney Serena, a political affairs officer at the South Korean Embassy in Kabul....Rev. Park Eun-jo, emphasized that the volunteers were there to provide free medical or educational services with no missionary intentions.
    ::end article quote::

    I would say those were good and honorable intentions for being in afghanistan

  • J »
    Wed Jul 25, 2007 2:59 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 14

    I am deeply sorry this individual's life was taken. I am also deeply disturbed by the current state of the Middle East and I truly hope the remaining hostages are released; however, what business do a group of South Korean civilians have in "one of the most insurgency-hit regions in Afghanistan"? I mean, I hear reports of this journalist being abducted in Iraq or this group of missionaries being held hostage in Afghanistan and I can't help but think, maybe Florida would have been a better choice for a vacation. No civilian, no matter who they are or what business they are engaging in, has any business entering a hostile nation full of known conflict and violent extremism. And what, we're expected to go rushing in and save these people because they VOLUNTARILY entered "one of the most insurgency-hit regions in Afghanistan"? Maybe next time that group from Virginia should stick to helping the multitudes of poor and destitute we have here in the states or the South Korean group might try looking to the problems in their own part of the world in North Korea. I sure hope the rest of that group makes it out alive but we all know this could have been easily avoided if people stay out of places where they don't belong.

  • Wed Jul 25, 2007 10:44 am Agree: 6   Disagree: 1

    Yeah media has really gone down hill when it puts Paris Hilton and Lindsy Lohan above innocent people being killed for trying to help others. This is the kind of stuff that we should hear about in the news.

  • Wed Jul 25, 2007 6:11 am Agree: 10   Disagree: 2

    Why is the mainstream media not covering this like they should? Generally the bigdogs(abs,nbc,cbs) love to cover anything to do with the Taliban or terrorists groups.

    Makes me wonder if the reason its being ignored is because they are Chistians hostages(afterall, we don't want the American public to be sympathetic towards Christians....). Thats simply my subjective opinion(I have no proof of course). But it does make me wonder.

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