Home>News Center>World
         
 

Three UN hostages in Afghanistan freed
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-11-23 12:17

Three U.N. workers kidnapped in Afghanistan have been released unharmed after more than three weeks in captivity, Afghan officials said Tuesday.

Filipino neighbors of Filipino U.N. diplomat Angelito Nayan celebrate in Las Pinas city, south of Manila November 23, 2004 after learning that Nayan had been freed from his kidnappers in Afghanistan. Three foreign U.N. workers held hostage in Afghanistan were freed unharmed on Tuesday, almost four weeks after they were abducted at gunpoint on the streets of the capital Kabul, the United Nations said. [Reuters]
Filipino neighbors of Filipino U.N. diplomat Angelito Nayan celebrate in Las Pinas city, south of Manila November 23, 2004 after learning that Nayan had been freed from his kidnappers in Afghanistan. Three foreign U.N. workers held hostage in Afghanistan were freed unharmed on Tuesday, almost four weeks after they were abducted at gunpoint on the streets of the capital Kabul, the United Nations said. [Reuters]
The hostages were released late Monday and are in good condition, three Afghan officials told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

Armed men seized Philippine diplomat Angelito Nayan, British-Irish citizen Annetta Flanigan and Shqipe Hebibi of Kosovo in Kabul on Oct. 28, the first such abduction in the Afghan capital since the Taliban fell three years ago.

Afghan officials earlier said they believed a criminal gang carried out the abductions, and that negotiations centered on a ransom demand.

News of the release came hours after U.S. and Afghan forces raided two houses in downtown Kabul on Monday and detained 10 people in connection with the abductions.

Filipino hostage Angelito Nayan, a junior diplomat seconded to the United Nation's Joint Electoral Management Body, is shown in this undated handout file photo released October 29, 2004. Three foreign U.N. workers held in Afghanistan since Oct. 28 were freed on November 23, 2004, government officials said. Annetta Flanigan from Northern Ireland, Kosovan Shqipe Hebibi and Filipino diplomat Angelito Nayan were abducted in Kabul last month after helping run a presidential election won by U.S.-backed incumbent Hamid Karzai. [Reuters]
Filipino hostage Angelito Nayan, a junior diplomat seconded to the United Nation's Joint Electoral Management Body, is shown in this undated handout file photo released October 29, 2004. Three foreign U.N. workers held in Afghanistan since Oct. 28 were freed on November 23, 2004, government officials said. Annetta Flanigan from Northern Ireland, Kosovan Shqipe Hebibi and Filipino diplomat Angelito Nayan were abducted in Kabul last month after helping run a presidential election won by U.S.-backed incumbent Hamid Karzai. [Reuters]
Most of the detainees were released after being questioned, an Afghan intelligence official said.

Afghan officials believe a criminal gang carried out the abductions, and that negotiations have centered on a ransom demand. But it remains unclear if the kidnappers are working for a Taliban-linked group that has claimed responsibility and demanded that Afghan and U.S. authorities free jailed comrades.

The leader of the group, which calls itself Jaish-al Muslimeen, or Army of Muslims, told AP it had no links to anyone detained in Kabul on Monday.

Akbar Agha also said in a telephone call Monday that the militants were "very close to an understanding" with government negotiators to exchange the hostages for 24 rebels in Afghan jails.

His claims could not be verified.

American officials worry a deal could encourage more abductions just as the military claims it is getting the better of Afghan insurgents using more conventional tactics.

In Monday's raids, security forces began the assault in the west of the city at about 4 a.m., using rockets to blast a hole in a wall surrounding the two-story home of a doctor working for the United Nations, witnesses said.

The doctor, Munir Mosamem, and his 17-year-old son were detained, Mosamem's wife, Zakia, told The Associated Press. The forces searched the house and confiscated three mobile phones and part of a computer, she said.

U.N. spokesman Manoel de Almeida e Silva said the doctor worked at a clinic for the world body in the city, but had no details on why the man was targeted.

Annetta Flanigan of Northern Ireland, left, Filipino diplomat Angelito Nayan, center, and Shqipe Habibi of Kosovo, right, seen in this video released by militant, Sunday, Oct.31, 2004. Militants released a video Sunday showing three frightened foreign U.N. hostages pleading for their release, and threatened to kill them unless United Nations' and British troops leave Afghanistan and Muslim prisoners are freed from U.S. jails. [AP]
Annetta Flanigan of Northern Ireland, left, Filipino diplomat Angelito Nayan, center, and Shqipe Habibi of Kosovo, right, seen in this video released by militant, Sunday, Oct.31, 2004. Militants released a video Sunday showing three frightened foreign U.N. hostages pleading for their release, and threatened to kill them unless United Nations' and British troops leave Afghanistan and Muslim prisoners are freed from U.S. jails. [AP]
Another eight men were detained in a derelict house next door, where several impoverished families of recently returned refugees were living, witnesses said.

The intelligence official said those eight were quickly released, but that the doctor and his son remained in American custody.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Hu urges Japan to face history, not war shrine

 

   
 

Sabotage not cause of airliner crash

 

   
 

China batch-produces SARS reagent

 

   
 

Three UN hostages in Afghanistan freed

 

   
 

China's oil imports rise to hit record high

 

   
 

EU to send China positive signal on arms ban

 

   
  Three UN hostages in Afghanistan freed
   
  Iran halts uranium enrichment
   
  Iraqi PM confident about Iraq elections
   
  Jet crashes before picking up elder Bush
   
  Strong earthquake rattles New Zealand's South Island
   
  McDonald's CEO resigns to fight cancer
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Afghan militants to decide fate of UN hostages
   
Afghan UN kidnappers say government agrees deal
   
Afghans say to kill UN hostage if demands not met
   
Hostage-taking wave has roots in poverty
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement