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Taliban stop bus and kidnap Koreans-police
20 Jul 2007 03:36:20 GMT
Source: Reuters
KABUL, July 20 (Reuters) - Taliban insurgents stopped a bus in Afghanistan and kidnapped some of the passengers, including Korean citizens, a local police chief said on Friday.

The bus was travelling from the southern city of Kandahar to the capital Kabul on Thursday when Taliban rebels stopped it in the Qarabagh district of Ghazni province, the local police chief Khowaja Mohammad Sadeeq told Reuters.

It was not immediately clear how many passengers had been abducted. Local Taliban commander Mohammad Sharif took responsibility.

Taliban insurgents have kidnapped a number of foreign nationals as part of their campaign to overthrow the Afghan government and drive out its Western backers.

Two Germans and six Afghans were abducted southwest of Kabul on Wednesday and are still missing.

One German national was kidnapped in western Afghanistan this month, but was released unharmed after few days.

The Taliban kidnapped two French aid workers and three of their Afghan colleagues in southwestern Afghanistan in April but later released them unharmed.
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Workers load containers filled with aid supplies such as water, noodles, clothes and medical supplies to North Korea on a ship at a port in Incheon, about 40 km (25 miles) west of Seoul, August 24, 2007. North Korea and international aid agencies said the impoverished state was hit by some of its worst flooding in years earlier this month that killed hundreds, ravaged farm land, destroyed thousands of buildings and left over 300,000 people homeless.



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