Posted on 08/01/2007 3:52:08 PM PDT by KayEyeDoubleDee
Michelle Malkin found a new photo of the Korean Hostages:
http://kr.news.yahoo.com/service/news/shellview.htm?linkid=459&articleid=2007080107591321223Here's a very clumsy BabelFish translation, from Korean, to English:http://img.news.yahoo.co.kr/picture/2007/23/20070801/2007080107591321223_115521_0.jpg
http://michellemalkin.com/2007/08/01/south-korean-christian-hostage-crisis-rescue-attempt/
http://babelfish.altavista.com/babelfish/trurl_pagecontent?lp=ko_en&url=http%3A%2F%2Fkr.news.yahoo.com%2Fservice%2Fnews%2Fshellview.htm%3Flinkid%3D459%26articleid%3D2007080107591321223
Aren't they all?
Prayers for these captives.
God bless these folks!
Dummies.
Prayers for these great kids.
bttt
Our job is to bring the Word to the Lost, to bring Light to darkness.
These are brave kids because they certainly went to a very dark and dangerous area.
I pray the LORD protects and comforts the survivors. And to those that were executed - we all have an appointment with death. I can't think of a better way to go than in doing one's work for the LORD.
God Bless them.
They’re lovely. Praying for them.
Thank you for posting the photos. Many prayers lifted that God will work in the most powerful way on behalf of His children in a way that the whole world will clearly see His goodness, power, sovereignty, and justice. May they be protected and their families comforted. In Jesus Christ’s name. Amen
Wow! They are ALL so beautiful! And so happy-looking. I will be praying for them!
Why are they in Afghanistan in the first place. Were they missionaries or relief workers. Does anybody know?
Asia pinglist ping.
They are Christian aid workers. Direct proselytizing was not part of their mission.
Thanks.
They visited the US embassy in Seoul on Wednesday, and were told their plea would be passed to Washington. The Taleban have already killed two of the 23 hostages, and threatened to shoot more if their demand of a prisoner release is not met. South Korean officials have reportedly been holding talks with the Taleban to try to secure the hostages' release. Mounting pressure The 23 Korean Christian aid workers - 18 of them women - were seized on 19 July as they were travelling on a bus down the Kabul to Kandahar highway. The aid workers' leader, Pastor Bae Hyung-kyu, was the first to be shot dead by the militants. His death was reported over the weekend. On Tuesday, South Korea confirmed that a second hostage had been killed - 29-year-old Shim Sung-min, a former IT worker. The family members who visited the US embassy in Seoul said they were determined to do all they could to save their loved ones. "We will hold on to any small hope to save them," said Ryu Haeng-sik, whose 35-year-old wife Kim Yoon-yong is one of the captives. "We cannot say we're relieved, but there is no other way but to believe their words, that they're going to do their best," he said of the American officials.
The Seoul government has also appealed for "flexibility" in negotiations with the Taleban - which analysts say is effectively a request for the US to make an exception to its policy of refusing to acquiesce to the group's demands. The presidential office issued a statement on Tuesday, admitting that Seoul was powerless to grant Taleban demands, "because it doesn't have any effective means to influence decisions of the Afghan government". The international community, and the US in particular, is seen to have much greater leverage. But Afghan President Hamid Karzai has already refused to swap prisoners for hostages, after he was criticised for releasing five Taleban members from jail in March in exchange for an Italian reporter. 'Don't kill, negotiate' As the hostage saga continues, anti-US sentiment in South Korea is rising, with local people angry that Washington has not stepped in to help. About 100 protesters held a rally outside the US embassy on Wednesday, carrying banners reading "Bush: Don't kill, negotiate" and shouting: "The US is responsible for the killing of hostages". US President George Bush "has a responsibility to intervene and negotiate with the Taleban", activist Oh Hye-ran told the Associated Press. Outrage over the killing has also sparked increasing calls for South Korea to pull out its 200 troops in Afghanistan, or even to send these troops to rescue the remaining captives.
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Aren’t they beautiful! The Taliban had better watch it before they make me really, really angry.
Quit belly aching and send in the ROK Marines, special ops group.
I'm sorry for the circumstance, but did Washington send them there?Why not use some of that angry sentiment against the TERRORISTS and get your own people for crying out loud, we have a war to conduct.
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