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A female hostage among the remaining 22 Koreans held by Taliban fighters appealed on Saturday for a speedy end to their ordeal, as a senior Afghan official said force may be used to free them if talks fail.
The woman, one of 18 female hostages among the South Korean Christian volunteers kidnapped in Afghanistan more than a week ago, spoke to Reuters on the mobile phone of a Taliban fighter. "We are tired and being moved from one location to another," she said in broken Dari, one of the main languages in Afghanistan. "We are kept in separate groups and are not aware of each other. We ask the Taliban and the government to release us," she said. Pronunciation of her name could not be understood by a Reuters reporter who spoke to her.
Earlier Munir Mangal, a deputy interior minister, said negotiators were attempting to hold more talks with the Taliban. "We believe in the talks and if dialogue fails then we will resort to other means," he told Reuters. When asked if that meant use of force, he replied: "Certainly".
Mangal also leads a government team tasked to secure the release of the South Koreans. He said mediators included Islamic clergy who were trying to persuade the Taliban to free the hostages without conditions.
He also ruled out bowing to the Taliban demand to free insurgent captives held by Kabul. "We are trying to finish this work through understanding without any conditions," he said.
The Taliban have set a series of deadlines for the Afghan government to agree to free rebel prisoners and killed the leader of the South Korean church group on Wednesday, but Taliban spokesmen could not be immediately reached on Saturday.
A Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousuf, said on Friday the group would not issue any further deadlines over the hostages as he said Kabul had given assurances it would release Taliban prisoners as part of an exchange deal. The spokesman has accused the government of "killing time and playing tricks".

Copyright Reuters, 2007

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