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Korean hostages photo taken before boarding the plane to
Afghanistan
The 2007 South Korean hostage crisis in
Afghanistan began on July 19, 2007, when 23 South Korean missionaries were
captured and held hostage by
members of the Taliban while
passing through Ghazni Province of Afghanistan. Two male
hostages were executed before the deal was reached between the
Taliban and the South Korean government. The group, composed of
sixteen women and seven men, was captured while traveling from Kandahar to Kabul by bus on a mission sponsored by the
Saemmul Presbyterian Church.[1] The
crisis began when two local men, who the driver had allowed to
board, started shooting to bring the bus to a halt. Over the next
month, the hostages were kept in cellars and farmhouses and
regularly moved in groups of three to four.[2]
Of the 23 hostages captured, two men, Bae Hyeong-gyu, a
42-year-old South Korean pastor of Saemmul Church, and Shim Seong-min, a
29-year-old South Korean man, were executed on July 25 and July 30,
respectively. Later, with negotiations making progress, two women,
Kim Gyeong-ja and Kim Ji-na, were released on August 13 and the
remaining 19 hostages on August 29 and August 30.[3]
The release of the hostages was secured with a South Korean
promise to withdraw its 200 troops from Afghanistan by the end of
2007. Although the South Korean government offered no statement, a
Taliban spokesman claimed that the militant group also received
some US$20 million in exchange for the safety of the captured
missionaries.
Negotiations
As South Korea was already scheduled to withdraw its 200 troops
by the end of the year, the Taliban's initial demand was only that
they hold to this plan, but later also sought the release of 23
Taliban militants from prison. South Korean representatives in
Washington DC requested a meeting with Afghanistan Kidnap / Ransom
experts from SCG International Risk on August
1. SCG then began advising the South Koreans on ways to resolve the
crisis.
The Taliban issued and extended several deadlines for the
release of the prisoners, after which they threatened to begin
killing the hostages. Freedom for the militants was ruled out when
it was apparent the Korean negotiators could not secure the release
of Afghani prisoners, as Afghan president Hamid Karzai had previously faced
criticism for freeing five rebel prisoners in exchange for an
Italian hostage.[4]
Face-to-face meetings between the Taliban and South Korea began
on August 10, resulting in the release of two female hostages, Kim
Ji-na and Kim Gyeong-ja, on August 13. However, on August 18, a
spokesman said that the talks had failed and the fates of the
hostages were being considered.[5]
Release
The freedom of the remaining nineteen hostages (fourteen women
and five men)[6] was
secured on August 28[7]
with the participation of Indonesia as a neutral Muslim country. They were eventually released on
August 29 and August 30.
After the release, a Taliban official announced that South Korea
had paid the Taliban more than US$20 million in ransom for the lives of the hostages.[8]
However, South Korea stated that they have made a promise with the
Taliban that they would not make any statements about the
ransom.[9]
Response
Public gatherings were held in Korea during the capture to pray
for the safety of the hostages. Muslims residing in Korea also expressed
their grief regarding the incident and avow that the acts of the
Taliban are against the principles of Islam.[10] Many
Koreans nevertheless held numerous protests and demonstrations
outside the mosque in Seoul. [11]
On the other hand, many Koreans were critical of the hostages,
as the hostages were conducting Christian missionary service in
Islamic Afghanistan despite the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Trade's repeated warnings that Taliban has plans to kidnap Koreans
in order to free imprisoned militants.[12] Protestant Churches in general also come
under intense criticism in South Korean society.[1]
Among these criticising the deal from the government as a
dangerous precedent was the bishop of Taejon and chairman of Caritas Corea Lazarus You Heung-sik.[2]
The execution of the two hostages also provoked outrage in much
of the rest of the world.
Timeline
- On July 19, 2007, 23 South Korean Presbyterian Christian
aid workers were captured by the Taliban from a public bus
traveling in the Ghazni
Province, from Kandahar to
Kabul, and held hostage.
- On July 20 the Taliban demanded that all South Korean forces be
withdrawn from Afghanistan within 24 hours and also that Afghan
president Hamid
Karzai release all Taliban inmates.
- On July 21 South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun gave a national televised
speech informing the public of the kidnappings. The Taliban reduced
its demand to twenty-three Taliban prisoners in exchange for the
lives of the hostages.
- On July 24 the Taliban
demanded a sum of $100,000 in exchange for the right to contact the
hostages via phone. The South Korean government refuses.
- On July 25 one of the South Korean hostages was executed. South
Korea's foreign ministry identified the victim as 42-year-old South
Korean pastor Bae Hyeong-gyu, who was the leader of the
group.[13]
- On July 29 a final deadline was set by the Taliban for July 30,
0730 GMT.[14]
- On July 30 the Taliban extended the deadline for the seventh
time by 4 hours to 1130 GMT to give Afghan officials more time to
negotiate.[15] A
Taliban spokesperson later announced another male hostage had been
killed because the government did not cede to the group's
demands.[16][17] This
was later confirmed when the body of 29-year-old Shim Seong-min was found in the village of
Arzoo (50 miles from where the
kidnapping took place).[18]
- On July 31 the deadline was extended to August 1, 0730 GMT.[19]
- On August 1 South Korean officials meet with SCG
International Risk Kidnap / Ransom consultants at the South
Korean Embassy in Washington DC.
- On August 1, 1200 GMT, another deadline passed, while the
local governor said the Taliban militants have agreed to a
face-to-face meeting requested by South Korea's ambassador".[20] North Korea also called
for the release of the hostages.[21]
- On August 2, 1200 GMT, Korean hostage negotiators agreed to
direct talks with Taliban kidnappers in Afghanistan.[22]
- On August 10, 1600 GMT, the Taliban began the first round of
face-to-face talks with a South Korean team concerning the
hostages. The talks were held in an area under the control of the
Afghan government in Ghazni province.[23] Two
top Taliban leaders and four South Korean officials met at the
office of the Afghan Red Crescent in Ghazni, along with four
members of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).[24]
- On August 13, two female hostages were released as a goodwill
gesture.[25]
The Taliban had originally decided to free Lee Ji-yeong, but she
allowed another hostage to take her place.[26]
- On August 18, the Taliban announced that the face-to-face talks
with the South Koreans had failed and that they were considering
the fate of the remaining hostages.
- On August 28, a breakthrough in the negotiations was announced
with the Taliban agreeing to release the remaining hostages on the
condition that South Korea withdraw its two-hundred non-combat
troops within the year and suspend missionary work in Afghanistan.
Indonesia was a neutral Muslim party in these negotiations.
- On August 29, a total of twelve hostages were released.[27]
- On August 30, the remaining seven hostages were released,
bringing an end to the crisis.
- On September 1, South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun called
Afghan President Hamid
Karzai and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to
thank them for their help in getting the hostages released. Karzai
praised the negotiation of the South Korea government.[28]
- In December 2009, the South Korean defence ministry announced
the army would return to Afghanistan with 350 troops in 2010 to
protect South Korean civilian engineers working on reconstruction.
These troops would not engage in any fighting except to protect the
aid team an be backed by helicopters, armoured vehicles and an
unmanned reconnaissance drone to protect the 100 civilian engineers
and 40 police. The South Korean contingent would be based in Parwan
province, just north of Kabul for 30 months from 1 July 2010 [29].
List of
hostages
| Romanized name |
Name in Hangul |
Name in Hanja |
Gender |
Birth year |
Status |
| Bae Hyeong-gyu |
배형규 |
裵亨圭 |
Male |
1965 |
killed on July 25, 2007 |
| Shim Seong-min |
심성민 |
沈聖珉 |
Male |
1978 |
killed on July 30, 2007 |
| Kim Gyeong-ja |
김경자 |
金慶子 |
Female |
1970 |
released on August 13, 2007 |
| Kim Ji-na |
김지나 |
金智娜 |
Female |
1975 |
released on August 13, 2007 |
| Ryu Gyeong-shik |
류경식 |
柳慶植 |
Male |
1952 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Ko Sei-hoon |
고세훈 |
高世勳 |
Male |
1980 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lyu Jeong-hwa |
유정화 |
柳貞和 |
Female |
1968 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lee Seon-yeong |
이선영 |
李善英 |
Female |
1970 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lee Ji-yeong |
이지영 |
李智英 |
Female |
1970 |
released on August 29, 2007
(offered to be freed August 13) |
| Han Ji-yeong |
한지영 |
韓智英 |
Female |
1973 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lee Jeong-ran |
이정란 |
李貞蘭 |
Female |
1974 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lim Hyeon-ju |
임현주 |
林賢珠 |
Female |
1975 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Cha Hye-jin |
차혜진 |
車惠珍 |
Female |
1976 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| An Hye-jin |
안혜진 |
安惠珍 |
Female |
1976 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Seo Myeong-hwa |
서명화 |
徐明和 |
Female |
1978 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Lee Ju-yeon |
이주연 |
李週妍 |
Female |
1980 |
released on August 29, 2007 |
| Je Chang-hee |
제창희 |
諸昌熙 |
Male |
1969 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Song Byeong-woo |
송병우 |
宋炳宇 |
Male |
1974 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Seo Gyeong-seok |
서경석 |
徐京石 |
Male |
1980 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Kim Yoon-yeong |
김윤영 |
金允英 |
Female |
1972 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Pak Hye-yeong |
박혜영 |
朴惠英 |
Female |
1972 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Lee Seong-eun |
이성은 |
李成恩 |
Female |
1983 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
| Lee Yeong-gyeong |
이영경 |
李英慶 |
Female |
1985 |
released on August 30, 2007 |
References
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- ^
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2007-08-29.
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- ^
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"Taliban says Korean hostage
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See also