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Deadline on hostages in
Afghanistan ends Today
Pakistan
Times
Monitoring Desk
KABUL (Afghanistan): The
deadline given by captors for the release of three foreign UN workers in
Afghanistan ends today, Tuesday.
The three residents from Britain, Kosovo, and Philippines were abducted from
Kabul. The captors demanded the release of Taliban prisoners from the Kabul
jail and the return of forces present in Afghanistan in exchange of the UN
workers.
The captor’s group ‘Jaish-Al-Muslimeen’ has said that if the demands are not
met then the tribal council would give its decision regarding the hostages
any time today.
Optimism by Karzai
Afghan President Hamid Karzai is hopeful that three UN workers held hostage
by militants in Afghanistan will be released, his spokesman told reporters
on Tuesday.
"We are hopeful. As I said we are using all our efforts to secure their
release in that we continue to be hopeful," spokesman Jawed Ludin said in
Kabul.
The captors, who have threatened to kill the hostages said the Afghan
government had been given time until sunset today, Tuesday to meet its
demands.
Recap
Militants threatening to kill three UN workers held hostage in Afghanistan
had, earlier, set a fresh deadline for their demands to be met on Sunday and
blamed the United States for slowing up negotiations.
The group, which seized the three foreign workers on October-28, said the
Afghan government had until Monday to meet its demands.
"We have extended the deadline," said Sayed Khaled, who claims to speak for
the group which has set and broken a series of deadlines.
Warning
"If they did not act on what they had promised and if they did not meet our
demands then our shura (tribal council) will make the final decision Monday
evening."
Khaled, speaking to a foreign news agency by telephone from an unknown
location, blamed comments by US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage
for hindering negotiations.
The group has handed over a list of 26 prisoners it wants to swap for the
hostages and was in talks with the Afghan government earlier this week.
Khaled said the government had been able to locate 18 of the 26 prisoners on
the list and was searching for the remaining eight "when comments by
Armitage stalled the process."
Armitage's Visit
On a visit to Afghanistan Wednesday, Armitage said the United States
believed negotiating with hostage-takers would only encourage more
kidnappings. "The talks were going on and there was good enough development
to release our prisoners," Khaled said.
"Armitage slowed down the process. We call on UN if they are an independent
organization and if the Afghan government is independent then they should
act on their own initiatives, not on instructions by Armitage. Otherwise it
is they who will lose, not us," he added.
Optimism
There had been hopes that the hostages would be freed Saturday, on the eve
of the three-day Eid al-Fitr holiday, which marks the end of the Muslim
fasting month of Ramadan.
Khaled also repeated the threat to kill the three hostages if the
kidnappers' demands were not met.
"Our prisoners will be finally released if not now in months' time or in
years but it will be their workers who will lose their lives. They should
remember that it is the question of three people's lives," he said.
The Captives
Annetta Flanigan from Northern Ireland, Shqipe Habibi from Kosovo, and
Angelito Nayan, a diplomat from the Philippines, were snatched from their
vehicle in busy lunchtime traffic in Kabul on October-28.
They had been overseeing the war-battered country's first-ever presidential
election, won by US-backed incumbent Hamid Karzai.
The kidnapping has cast a pall over what was widely seen as a successful
election without the widely feared bloodshed despite threats by the Taliban.
Tight Security
United Nations staff are under tight security in the Afghan capital
following the kidnappings with a curfew, limited travel in the capital and
escorts for UN personnel.
Foreigners in the capital have curtailed their movements, leaving almost
empty restaurants and areas such as Chicken Street which was the site of a
suicide bombing last month that killed one person. Life for most Afghans
however continues as normal.
Afghans have condemned the hostage-taking as contrary to Afghan and Muslim
traditions of hospitality with 20 Afghan women offering Thursday to swap
places with the UN hostages.●
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