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By Benjamin SandDesperate efforts to free the remaining 21 South Korean hostages continue in Afghanistan. Taleban officials say they are still seeking a possible prisoner exchange a day after Afghan President Hamid Karzai ruled out making any concessions1 to end the stand off. From Kabul VOA correspondent Benjamin Sand reports.
The negotiations2 continued Tuesday with no sign of any progress.
A top Taleban spokesman said the militant3 group would consider a one-for-one swap4 for pro-Taleban female prisoners held by U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
President Hamid Karzai in Washington Monday reaffirmed a joint5 U.S.-Afghan policy ruling out any deals to help free the 21 South Korean hostages.
Afghan officials though say they are working with South Korea to help set up face-to-face negotiations with the Taleban.
Until then, provincial6 governor Merajuddin Pattan says talk of a possible military intervention7 is premature8.
"We still haven't made the decision yet to have a military action there but the Koreans are requesting that we should wait until their face-to-face negotiations bear fruit," said Pattan.
Taleban forces kidnapped 23 South Korean church volunteers from a bus in Ghazni province on July 19.
South Korean protesters hold pictures of the remaining 21 kidnapped South Koreans in Afghanistan at a candlelight rally, 03 Aug 2007 |
The hostage crisis has exposed growing divisions within the international coalition10 operating in the region.
In South Korea relatives of the victims condemned11 Washington for not doing more to help free the hostages.
Relatives of South Koreans kidnapped in Afghanistan weep during a press conference in Sungnam, south of Seoul, 07 Aug 2007 |
And here in Afghanistan, rumors12 and conspiracy13 theories abound14 linking the kidnappers15 to neighbor Pakistan.
Governor Pattan says he believes members of Islamabad's powerful intelligence agency known as the ISI are behind the crisis.
"There is no doubt," he said. "There is no doubt…guys in the room when we were speaking with them on the phone they were translating the words in Urdu..."
Those accusations16, widely repeated in the local media here in Afghanistan, could seriously damage efforts to end a growing diplomatic rift17 between the South Asian neighbors.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are both key U.S. allies. They will discuss cross-border security issues in a landmark18 assembly or grand jirga in Kabul later this week.
Pakistan was a major backer of the Taleban until September 2001, when it allegedly cut ties with the militant group and agreed to support the U.S.-led war against terror.
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