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By Kurt AchinSouth Korea says kidnappers1 who killed a South Korean hostage in Afghanistan will be held accountable for their actions. As family and friends of the victim mourn, South Korean negotiators are trying to save the lives of 22 other hostages still in the custody2 of Taleban insurgents3. VOA's Kurt Achin reports from Seoul.
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| Relatives of South Koreans kidnapped in Afghanistan react while they deliver a speech for the hostages in Seoul, South Korea, 26 July 2007 |
Cha Song-min, a spokesman for the families, says they are consoling each other and avoiding moment-by-moment news coverage4.
Afghan officials say Taleban insurgents riddled5 42-year-old Christian6 pastor7 Bae Hyung-kyu with bullets. Then they dumped his body near where he and 22 other South Korean Christian aid workers were taken hostage a week ago.
Qari Yousuf Ahmadi, who calls himself a spokesman for the hard-line Islamist militants9, confirmed the grim news Thursday. He says Taleban members carried out the shooting because negotiations10 with Afghan and South Korean representatives had failed. He also later said the other hostages are still alive.
Baek Jong-chun, a senior secretary to South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, offered condolences to Bae's family, and condemned11 the killing12.
Baek says the kidnappers will be held accountable for taking the life of a South Korean citizen.
The kidnappers demand that a number of their comrades be released from Afghan prisons in exchange for the hostages' release.
Chun Ho-sun, a spokesman for South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun, says Mr. Roh has held several phone discussions with his Afghan counterpart, Hamid Karzai. He says dealing13 with the hostage-takers is a complex affair.
Chun says even though the basic demands of the insurgents are well known, the specific details of the demands are constantly changing - because the militants are divided into at least 10 sub-groups with different goals.
The hostages defied a South Korean ban on travel to Afghanistan to carry out what their church describes as humanitarian14 activities. South Korea has a few hundred military and civilian15 personnel in the country, providing non-combat support to international security forces there.
Many South Koreans have expressed more anger at the hostages than the Taleban. Critics describe them as proselytizing16 missionaries17, who unnecessarily put themselves at risk in a militant8 Islamic area.
There is also some resentment18 toward the United States, the dominant19 force in the international coalition20 providing security in Afghanistan. U.S. and international forces attacked Afghanistan and ousted21 the former Taleban government because it was sheltering the al Qaida terrorist group responsible for the September 2001 attacks in the U.S.
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