Advertisement

2 foreign aid workers among team reportedly abducted in Afghanistan

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

KABUL, Afghanistan — Two foreign women working for a Swiss-based aid group have been kidnapped in the remote northeastern province of Badakhshan, Afghan officials said Wednesday.

Three male Afghan colleagues were abducted as well, but one apparently escaped and then alerted the authorities, according to officials in Faizabad, the provincial capital.

Advertisement

The team was captured by a group of gunmen on Tuesday while traveling by donkey or horseback in an isolated district where floods had washed out roads, and an intensive search was underway, said Abdul Mahrouf Rasikh, a spokesman for the provincial governor.

He said the aid workers were thought to be alive but that it was not known who the kidnappers were and no demands had been relayed. Several insurgent groups as well as criminal gangs are active in the area.

The provincial spokesman said the aid group “very unfortunately” had not notified provincial police in advance about their travel plans. Team members, who were working on malnutrition and maternal healthcare, were on their way from the capital to the district of Yawan, where their organization runs a clinic, he said.

Rasikh said those kidnapped were working for a group called Medair, which has been active in Afghanistan for more than a decade. The organization, which is based in Switzerland, provides aid and rehabilitation in conflict zones and disaster areas, according to its website.

The provincial spokesman said the two foreign women were doctors, and that the Afghans included two translators and another colleague. He did not know their nationalities.

Medair spokesman Aurelien Demaurex, contacted by telephone, said the organization had no immediate information about the incident. NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said it was aware of the reports that the team was missing. A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy, Mark Thornburg, said neither of the women was thought to be American.

Advertisement

In 2010, Badakhshan was the scene of the gruesome killings of 10 foreign medical workers, including six Americans, apparently by insurgents. Some of that team’s members had worked in Afghanistan for many years and were fluent in Dari, one of the country’s two main languages.

ALSO:

6 world powers open Iran nuclear talks with ‘new offer’

Egyptians wait in long lines to vote for Mubarak’s successor

Garden Grove woman awaits husband’s release from jail in Vietnam

— Laura King and Aimal Yaqubi

Advertisement