<body>

02 August 2007

Channel News Asia - Asia Pacific News
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/291740/1/.html

GHAZNI, Afghanistan : The Taliban threatened to kill more South Korean hostages after another deadline expired on Wednesday, as helicopters dropped leaflets in the area where the group was captured warning of a military operation. "The 21 hostages are still alive," a spokesman for the hardline movement, Yousuf Ahmadi, told AFP by telephone hours after the noon (0730 GMT) deadline passed. "The leadership council of the Taliban is in the process of making a decision," he said, clarifying afterwards that they were considering whether more of the captives should be killed. The extremist group has already shot dead two men from a 23-member aid mission seized in the southern province of Ghazni two weeks ago. Ahmadi said talks with government negotiators had continued on Wednesday but there was "not a good result." The insurgent movement is demanding the release of at least eight of its men from Afghan jails, which authorities have so far rejected. The spokesman said none of the surviving hostages had yet been killed as there was talk South Korean negotiators wanted to meet directly with the Taliban. "We are waiting for that delegation to open a new phase of negotiations," he said. Military choppers earlier dropped leaflets in Ghazni, including the Qarabagh district where the South Korean Christians were captured, asking residents to leave ahead of a planned operation. The defence ministry denied however this would be a bid to free the captives, saying it was a routine exercise planned months ago and "has no links to the South Korean hostages issue." A South Korean embassy official told AFP: "We have no information about any operation. Before launching any operation, we must be informed." Ghazni police chief Alishah Ahmadzai also said there was no plan to use troops to extract the hostages. "Security forces are in the area. They have been in a state of emergency since the crisis started. But there is no military operation in our plan." A special South Korean envoy was quoted by Pajhwok Afghan News agency saying his government opposed military action. Envoy Baek Jong-chun said, ahead of leaving Afghanistan on Wednesday, his government "would like to emphasise once again that the safety of the Korean hostages will be a matter of the highest priority." With tensions mounting and Qarabagh said to have been surrounded by soldiers for days, the Taliban's Ahmadi said fighters were "ready to answer with force and if there's any pressure on us, the lives of the hostages will be in danger." A top US official, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Christopher Hill, and Egypt's largest opposition group, the Muslim Brotherhood, meanwhile joined international calls for the hostages' release. Adding to concern about their chances, the bullet-riddled bodies of four Afghan court officials were found on Wednesday near where the bloodied corpse of one of the foreigners was dumped this week. "We killed them because they worked for the government," Ahmadi said. New clashes were also reported on Wednesday between Taliban and security forces in the province, 100 kilometres south of Kabul, with 15 people killed in the past day. In one incident, militants stormed the house of a policeman and killed him and two relatives, the provincial police chief said. Police sent to the scene killed eight attackers, Ahmadzai said. Four Taliban were killed in fighting elsewhere, he said. Police in the southern province of Kandahar said a dozen Taliban and a policeman were killed in a gunbattle there on Tuesday. There were meanwhile fresh fears for a German engineer held since July 18, a day before the South Koreans were captured, after Al-Jazeera television broadcast on Tuesday a video that it said showed him pleading for his life. The footage was the first to show the engineer, said to be 62 years old. - AFP/de


Signing Off.