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Middle East
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Taliban release Canadian journalist12/01/2001
By CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA CHAMAN, Pakistan — A Canadian journalist held for four days by the Taliban in
southern Afghanistan was freed Saturday and crossed into neighboring Pakistan
after Canadian diplomats negotiated his release. Ken Hechtman, who writes for the weekly Montreal Mirror, was detained by the
Taliban on Tuesday after driving into southern Afghanistan without travel
documents, Taliban official Mullah Aminullah said. The Taliban held him in Spinboldak 10 miles across the border, and despite
initial reports of torture and chains, Andre Lemay, a Canadian government
spokesman in Ottawa, said Hechtman did not appear to have been mistreated.
``He does appear to be in good health, though that's something we will have
to check out,'' he said. Aminullah said officials had been considering prosecuting Hechtman on spying
charges, but relented during a meeting Saturday with Pakistani officials and
Canadian diplomats. ``We are releasing him on the recommendation of Pakistani authorities,'' he
said. Shafi Kakar, a Pakistani official who participated in the negotiations, said
the Taliban had been suspicious because Hechtman arrived without travel
documents — not even the Pakistani documents needed to visit the border area —
and had a satellite telephone and maps of the area. ``The Taliban say, `We would have allowed him in if he had approached us,'''
Kakar said. ``They say, `Why did he come like a spy?''' The Taliban have barred Western journalists from entering the parts of
Afghanistan they control. Taliban officials had earlier denied holding Hechtman, saying they briefly
detained him Tuesday and released him. They said Hechtman must have been
kidnapped. Hechtman, 33, has been in Pakistan and Afghanistan since early October. His
most recent report for the Mirror, from Peshawar, Pakistan, appeared in the Nov.
22 edition. A Nov. 15 article was from Taliban-held territory in Afghanistan.
Eight journalists have been killed in Afghanistan since Oct. 7, when the
United States launched a military campaign to drive the Taliban from power for
harboring Osama bin Laden, the prime suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
in the United States. |
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