Taliban: hostage talks in ‘final stage’
Purported Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi said negotiations were in the “final stage”, but he provided no other details.
The Korean negotiators met the kidnappers somewhere in Ghazni province, said a provincial official who asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation. The official said the militants were demanding monetary payment for the release of the hostages.
Previously, Mr Ahmadi said the militants wanted 23 Taliban prisoners released in exchange for the lives of the hostages.
The South Korean hostages, including 18 women, were kidnapped on Thursday while riding a bus through Ghazni province on the Kabul-Kandahar highway, Afghanistan’s main thoroughfare.
South Korea’s Defence Ministry, meanwhile, said it asked the Afghan military to refrain from conducting operations near the location where the hostages were believed to be held, out of concern the kidnappers could be provoked.
Villagers in Ghazni held a rally demanding the hostages be released, said Mohammad Zaman, the deputy provincial police chief. Some carried banners and shouted slogans calling for the Koreans to be freed, he said. An AP reporter saw 100 to 150 villagers demonstrating.
“We want the Taliban to release them, because they are guests,” Mr Zaman said. “They are in Afghanistan and we want them to be safe.”
The South Korean church that the abductees attend has said its members were involved in medical and volunteer aid — not Christian missionary work.
Mr Ahmadi also said the militants were still holding one German and four Afghan hostages, despite his claims on Saturday that those hostages had been shot and killed.





