Taliban release five British nationals held for six months
Five British
nationals held by the Taliban since last December including the former BBC
cameraman and Afghanistan expert Peter Jouvenal were released on Monday after
backroom diplomacy by the British Foreign Office (FCDO).
It is
understood that the five had been seized separately, and British sources said
nothing was given in return for their release except an apology by them.
However, the British government on Sunday had released a statement renouncing
violence in Afghanistan and saying there was no alternative to pragmatic
engagement with the current administration.
Jouvenal was
arrested by the Taliban in Kabul six months ago after he had travelled to the
country to discuss some mining investments, and speak with the many
longstanding friends he has in the country.
He is
married to an Afghan with whom he has three children and was, in the words of
the BBC reporter John Simpson, one of the finest television cameramen in the
world. The two men worked together nearly two decades ago. He is 66 years old
and has high blood pressure. He had enjoyed little access to the outside world
in captivity, had not been seen by the the International Committee of the Red
Cross and had no charges levelled against him.
The FCDO
said it would not be releasing the names of any of the other people who had
been released, but confirmed that no other Britons were still in detention.
The foreign
secretary, Liz Truss, said in a tweet: “Pleased the UK has secured the release
of 5 British nationals detained in Afghanistan. They will soon be reunited with
their families. I am grateful for the hard work of British diplomats to secure
this outcome.”
The FCDO said:
“We welcome and appreciate the release by the current administration of
Afghanistan of five British nationals who were detained in Afghanistan.
“These
British nationals had no role in the UK government’s work in Afghanistan and
travelled to Afghanistan against the UK government’s travel advice. This was a
mistake.
“On behalf
of the families of the British nationals, we express their apologies for any
breach of Afghan culture, customs or laws, and offer their assurance of future
good conduct. The UK government regrets this episode.”
The day
before, in a statement that may have been part of the diplomatic effort, Hugo
Shorter, the UK chargé d’affaires for Afghanistan, based in Doha, said: “The UK
does not support anyone, including Afghan nationals, seeking to achieve
political change through violence, or any activity inciting violence for
political purposes, in Afghanistan, and will not allow UK soil to be used to
plan or prepare it, and we strongly discourage others from doing so.
“Violence of
any kind is not in Afghanistan’s interests, nor the international community’s,
and we deplore terrorist attacks of all kinds.
“To promote
peace and stability, to deliver essential humanitarian support to the Afghan
people, and to address shared concerns on security, there is no alternative to
engaging pragmatically with the current administration of Afghanistan, and that
is what we are doing.”
There seemed
no obvious reason for the release of the statement.
The Foreign
Office had recently strongly advised the shadow foreign secretary, David Lammy,
against travelling to Afghanistan, saying he was putting himself at risk, and
urging him not to talk to the Taliban during his two-day visit.
Lammy had
never had any intention of meeting the Taliban, and concentrated his visit
under UN protection on the issue of the humanitarian crisis in the country, and
the plight of women. Lammy has been critical that no UK minister has been to
Afghanistan since the US-led exodus last August led to the collapse of the
former government and the triumph of the Taliban.