Home arrow Global arrow Taliban and S Korean team 'to meet'
Aug 02 2007
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By Agencies   
Negroponte and Song discussed the plight of the hostages who began a third week in captivity [AFP]
Negroponte and Song discussed the plight of the hostages who began a third week in captivity [AFP]
The Taliban is reported to have agreed to meet South Korean diplomats to discuss the fate of 21 hostages they are holding in Afghanistan.

The expected meeting comes after South Korea and the United States ruled out the possibility of military operations to secure the release of South Koreans, a South Korean official said on Thursday.
 
Mirajuddin Pattan, the governor of Ghazni, told the AFP news agency that "a South Korean diplomatic delegation is to meet the Taliban for face-to-face talks to look for ways and solutions to free the South Korean nationals".
 
"This request from the Koreans has been accepted by the Taliban and now we are working on how, where and when this meeting could take place," he said.

A member of the South Korean delegation however told AFP that the Taliban's agreement to a meeting had not been officially confirmed to his group.

The Taliban said late on Wednesday they had not killed any more of the aid workers after the expiry of a deadline earlier in the day because the chance of direct talks with the South Koreans could open a "new phase of negotiations".

'No military operation'

In Manila, Song Min-soon, the South Korean foreign minister, and John Negroponte, the US deputy secretary of State, discussed the hostages during a meeting on Thursday on the sidelines of an Asian security conference, a foreign ministry official said.

"The two sides ruled out the possibility of military operations and placed a top priority on safely resolving the issue by mobilising all means," Song said after the meeting, the official said.

"The United States is not preparing military operations," he quoted Song as saying.

In another development, eight senior members of South Korea's National Assembly left for Washington on Thursday to urge US officials to take an

"active and positive" approach to the crisis, amid widespread perceptions that Washington is key to ending the crisis by influencing Afghanistan's government.

Song indicated there were difficulties in ending the crisis because of a US policy of refusing to negotiate with people it regards as terrorists, but vowed to resolve the issue while keeping intact the principle, the South Korean official said.

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