A member of Medair teaches
girls about sanitation
in Afghanistan. Four aid
workers for the organization
who were kidnapped on May 22
have been rescued
by NATO and Afghan forces.
Photo by: Medair
|
NATO and Afghan forces went on what U.K.
Prime Minister David Cameron described as a “breathtaking” rescue mission
Saturday (June 2), freeing the four aid workers taken by militants May 22 in Badakhshan province.
Medair confirmed the release of Briton Helen Johnston, Kenyan
Moragwa Oirere and two Afghan colleagues, who are now on their way to be
reunited with their families. The four — plus an Afghan colleague who
reportedly escaped prior to the rescue — were abducted by armed men
while visiting a relief site in the remote and mountainous Afghan region.
The humanitarian organization has no
immediate plans of curtailing its operations in Afghanistan, but Medair
spokesman Aurelien Demaurex told the Los Angeles Times the organization would “study” the possibility. Concerns on increasing insecurity
in the country have been growing, especially with the impending drawdown of
foreign troops.
Eight militants believed to have ties
with the Taliban were killed in the attack, Afghan intelligence spokesman
Shafiqullah Tahiri told The Associated Press. The abductors demanded for the
release of five imprisoned colleagues in Kabul in addition to a $1 million
ransom. They initially asked for $4 million, according to Tahiri.
Cameron expressed his “delight” over
the successful rescue mission and warned terrorists who hostage British
nationals to expect a “swift and brutal end.” He hailed the “extraordinary
work” done by British aid workers around the world, but said he cannot promise
the United Kingdom will be able to save all of them or that “it will end as
happily as today,” the Telegraph reports.
The British leader was speaking from
experience. Linda Norgrove, a British aid worker kidnapped by the Taliban,
was killed in a rescue attempt in October 2010.
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