Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

World|Fri, Aug. 10 2007 10:43 AM EDT

Taliban: No More Hostage Killing for Now

By Michelle Vu|Christian Post Reporter

The Taliban said Friday that it will not kill any of the remaining 21 South Korean hostages before its face-to-face meetings with the delegation from the East Asian country.

  • korean hostages
    (Photo: Christian Today Korea / Song Kyung-ho)
    Family members of the 21 Korean hostages kidnapped by the Taliban in Afghanistan hold signs in front of the Pakistan embassy in Seoul, to appeal for the safe return of the hostages August 9, 2007.

Nearly a dozen deadlines and numerous threats thereafter to kill the Christian captives have been made since their abduction on July 19.

With a deadlock in negotiations over the Taliban’s proposed prisoner-rebel exchange, the militant group has been working with South Korea on setting up a face-to-face meeting to discuss other options. Yet despite their agreement to meet, a location has not yet been set where both parties feel safe.

On Friday, purported Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi assured The Associated Press by phone from an undisclosed location that ”[u]ntil we sit for face-to-face negotiations with the Koreans, we have no plans to kill any Korean hostages.”

Meanwhile, South Korea has declared that all Korean aid groups will leave Afghanistan within one month on Wednesday as part of its effort to secure the release of the Korean hostages.

South Korean ambassador Kang Sung-zu also told Pashtun tribal leaders, who gathered at the South Korean embassy in Kabul, that Korea will not allow anymore of its citizens or aid groups to enter Afghanistan, according to Afghan TV station Tolo. The Pashtun tribal leaders are said to be from the same ethnic tribe as the majority of the Taliban rebels.

However, the ambassador noted that Korean organizations may return to Afghanistan in the future after the hostages are released and if the Afghan government guarantees their safety.

The Taliban’s purported spokesman said the departure of South Korean aid workers will help move negotiations forward.

“The pulling out of Korean aid workers will have an effect on our negotiations progress because pulling out of Koreans from Afghanistan is part of our demand,” said Ahmadi, according to AP. “It will have a positive effect,” he said, without elaborating.

In South Korea, the hostage families said that the mothers of several hostages – five women and a translator – will leave for the emirate of Dubai next Monday to plead for help from the Arab world for the release of their children, according to The Korea Times.

“The reason why we are sending women, especially mothers, to Dubai is that Islamic culture has more sympathy for women,” said the hostage families’ spokesman, Cha Sung-min, on Friday, according to AP.

On July 19, the Taliban abducted 23 Korean Christian volunteers in insurgency-plagued Ghazni province. Out of the aid group, 16 are females, according to Agence France-Presse. The church group was on its way to provide free medical services to poor Afghan citizens when their bus was hijacked.

Since their kidnapping, two male hostages have been killed. The leader of the aid group, Bae Hyung-kyu, was the first victim, found dead July 25 with 10 bullet holes in his body. The second victim, 29-year-old Shim Sung-min, was killed last Monday and his funeral ceremony was this past Saturday.

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

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  • Sun Aug 12, 2007 4:13 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    You are right, but you need to look at some things that were all public knowledge: South Korea (the republic) would not exist without the US. The demonstration was accompanied by demands of terrorist release (does that make sense to anyone?). The first thing the home church of the hostages did, was an appeal to the Word Council of churches. You might know that that council is not biblical. The second thing they did was litterally pray towards the Mosque in Korea. The very first thing they did in this case, of course, was sending their people as non-missionaries to a war zone without preparing them, and may I say, without praying (to the living God). The issue is not US competence, but the attitude of the Korean Presbyterian church and their take-it-easy non-missionary trips for 2 week have-fun stints that don't display God's work and breed carelessness both in mundane and in spiritual matters. Would you like your young ones to become martyrs because of some pastor's carelessness?
    Btw, I do pray, and I am aware that most people don't realize the pitiful state of Korean churches in general, the Presbyterian in particular. May God have mercy on all people, no matter what their expression.
    The Bible tells the church to judge itself. Presbyterians embracing Roman teaching, denying basic Bible teachings, Lutherans and Anglicans condoning gay preachers. These are just news, not personal criticism. Where do we want our children to go? I prefer US foreign policy over pseudo-Christian hypocrisy any time.

  • Sun Aug 12, 2007 10:19 am Agree: 3   Disagree: 0

    Didn't Jesus tell us to correct ourselves before we correct other Christians? Of course.

    You need to realize that the majority of South Koreans are non-Christians (only 1/4 of South Koreans are evangelistic Christians right now but increasing), so you are criticizing those who are non-Christians and calling them Christians. You need to investigate everything carefully and think carefully about what you say. Some Korean Christians may have made some mistakes, but look at this... many Christians in general make mistakes.

    When you look at the US, it's not so perfect as you think. I've met many crooked American politicians and some of the US military have messed things up (and the Islamic people have a worse image of Americans now). Many Americans call themselves Christians, but some don't even act godly. (I myself grew up and live in the US). Don't point fingers at a specific group of people.

    May God have mercy on your critical judgment. What you need to do is pray to God to work on people's hearts (including ours) and hearts in South Korea. Criticizing does not help.

  • Fri Aug 10, 2007 8:30 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 3

    At the same time, Koreans demonstrate against US military in Korea, the only warrant for deterrence against North Korea. That ambassador is doing an amazing job of nullifying his own statements. And of course, Islam is very favorable to women. Hindering the ISAF, self-contradicting politicians, demonstrating against their 1953 liberators, pulling out legitimate aid from Afgh....God have mercy on such Christian-Korean behavior.

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