Freed Hostages Make Plea on Al Jazeera
Two former hostages pleaded for the release of the remaining 19 Koreans still held by the Taliban during an interview with the Arab news network Al Jazeera.
Kim Kyung-ja, 37, and Kim Ji-na, 32, expressed the heavy hearts and the burden they carry knowing that although they are free their friends and colleagues are still in captivity.
"You probably think we are happy now, with our families. In fact, we can hardly sleep at night," Kim Ji-na told Al Jazeera during an interview broadcasted on Thursday.
"I understand that Islamic teachings give priority to life and family. Please release our co-workers as soon as possible."
The two female hostages were released by their captors on Aug. 13 after the first round of face-to-face talks between Taliban negotiators and a South Korean delegation. The rebels said they released the two hostages as a "gesture of goodwill" after negotiations were going well, although they still demanded the release of their jailed fighters for the remaining 19 hostages.
"Rather than being happy, my heart was breaking," Kim Kyung-ja said as she held back tears.
"I was thinking of the remaining 19 hostages."
A government official who accompanied the two during their return to Seoul said the hostages did not know they were being released until the handover, according to Yonhap News Agency.
"As they moved frequently during the captivity, they were thinking that the Taliban were taking them to another place, not noticing they would be released," the official said.
Moreover, the two were not even aware of the deaths of the church group's leader, the Rev. Bae Hyung-kyu, and their colleague, Shim Sung-min, until they were told the day before returning to South Korea.
The two were in the same group as Shim but thought he was freed when he was called out and never returned to the group.
"They did not know of the deaths of Rev. Bae and Shim even when they were moved to a U.S. Air Force base in Bagram," said the official last Friday, according to Yonhap. "They learned the fact on Thursday and were shocked. They cried about 30 minutes. They showed symptoms of anorexia, mental anxiety and have not smiled at all since then," he said.
South Korea escorted the two freed females back to their homeland on Aug. 17 where they were reunited with their families at the airport and then quickly taken to a military hospital in Bundang, south of Seoul, for medical checkups.
Korean officials chose a military hospital because of fear that the hostages' exposure to the media could adversely affect negotiations for the remaining 19 hostages.
During the interview with Al Jazeera, the two also revealed the name of the Korean hostage who had chosen to stay behind so one of them could instead be freed.
"We were very worried when we heard that Ji-young volunteered to be left behind," said Kim Ji-na.
Lee Ji-young was among the female hostages and had worked as one of the translator for the group of volunteers.
"But the Taliban allowed Ji-young to write a letter to her family which consoled her and gave her some hope that she would come home soon," said Kim Ji-na.
The two former hostages said they were not treated badly by their captors and were provided basic needs such as food, medicine and some blankets.
Both women were part of the group of 23 Christian volunteers that was kidnapped by the Taliban on July 19 – the largest abduction of foreigners in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001. Since then, two male hostages have been killed – the leader of the group, Bae Hyung-kyu, who was found dead on July 25, and 29-year-old Shim Sung-min, whose body was found July 30.
Negotiation since the release of the two women has become deadlocked as the rebels continue to demand the release of prisoners held by Afghan and U.S. forces while the two governments have firmly refused the Taliban's demand.
South Korea has been stuck in the middle – calling the Afghan and U.S. governments to be flexible while noting that it understands the difficulty of the situation in regards to the fight against terrorism. Korean officials have also tried to negotiate other options with the captors, repeatedly explaining that it has no control over the release of the prisoners.
Despite efforts, the Taliban renewed threats Wednesday to kill the remaining hostages if their demands were not met. Unlike several of the threats before, the militant group did not immediately set a deadline.