Female Korean Hostage Forfeited Freedom for Colleague

A Taliban militant said Wednesday that one of the hostages had foregone her chance of freedom to allow another captive who was more ill to be released.

|PIC1|The spokesman for Taliban commander Abdullah Jan, who only identified himself as Masoom, said he was unable to recall the name of the woman who sacrificed her freedom.

"Their names are very difficult to remember," said Masoom to The Korea Times. "All names are alike with the difference of a few characters," he said. "This is why we can't remember them."

Two female hostages were released Monday afternoon and were said to be in better health than earlier reported. The freed captives were identified as Kim Kyung-ja and Kim Ji-na, 37 and 32 years old, respectively.

Jan's spokesman said that the Korean media should speak to the two released hostages who could provide the name of the woman who chose to stay behind.

Yousuf Ahmadi, who has represented the Taliban in most of the media phone interviews, said he did not know the name of the female hostage because he never met any of them, but Jan or his spokesman Masoom did because they were holding the captives.

The release of the two women Monday was the Taliban's "goodwill gesture" towards the Korean people and officials after four days of face-to-face negotiations which began on August 10. Immediately following the breakthrough, however, no second round of in person talks were scheduled, with the Taliban explaining that negotiators on both sides were taking time to discuss the situation with their superiors.

After a day of over-the-phone talks, the Taliban announced Wednesday that direct talks would resume on Thursday for the remaining 19 South Korean hostages.

"The talks will resume tomorrow at 10 o'clock (3:30 a.m. EDT) in the same place in Ghazni province," said Taliban spokesman Ahmadi, according to Agence France-Presse.

Talks have been held at the local headquarters of the Afghan Red Crescent Society, which is associated with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

Although outwardly the rebels still appear to be demanding a prisoner-hostage exchange, inside reports say a ransom deal is quietly taking place.

Taliban negotiators have reportedly asked for $500,000 for the release of each hostage or a total of nearly $10m. South Korea, meanwhile, has said they are willing to pay $500,000 for all 19 remaining hostages, according to The Korea Times.

If the report is true, both sides likely resorted to ransom negotiations after Washington and Kabul both made it clear that there would be no exchange of Taliban prisoners for Korean hostages - the Taliban's main demand since the beginning.

Rebel prisoners are held by Afghan and US military, and South Korea has repeatedly told the Taliban that they have no control over the release of the rebels.

It has been nearly a month since the Taliban militants abducted the group of 23 South Korean Christian volunteers on July 19 - the largest abduction of foreigners in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001. During that period, two male hostages have been killed - the leader of the group, Bae Hyung-kyu, who was found dead on July 25, and 29-year-old Shim Sung-min, whose body was found July 30.

The South Korean embassy has declined to confirm the new round of talks, but has said that communications with the Taliban "remain open," according to AFP.
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