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Taliban demands rejected after video release

Taliban demands rejected after video release

Write: Yardley [2011-05-20]
German officials reaffirmed yesterday Berlin would not give in to pressure from the Taliban to withdraw troops from Afghanistan, after Al-Jazeera television broadcast a video showing a German hostage.
The man appeared on Al-Jazeera on Tuesday in a video without sound but a presenter said the hostage, which the broadcaster identified as Rudolf B., urged Germany and the United States to pull their troops out of Afghanistan to help save his life.
"We cannot bow down to such demands," said Peter Struck, the parliamentary leader of the center-right Social Democrats, who share power with Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives.
Struck, a former defense minister, said there was no question of withdrawing the 3,000 troops Germany has in the north of Afghanistan.
A Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said experts were analyzing the video, which showed one of the militants pointing a racket-propelled grenade launcher at the man.
"This is a targeted attempt at intimidation," Julia Gross told a news conference, adding: "The government is working around the clock to try to establish contact with the hostage and try to free him."
The Taliban seized two Germans and five Afghans in the Wardak province earlier this month. The body of one of the Germans was found with bullet wounds, but the other German and four Afghans were still being held by the Taliban.
One of the Afghan captives managed to escape.
The insurgents have demanded the release of 10 Taliban prisoners held by the Afghan government and the withdrawal of German troops from Afghanistan in exchange for the hostages' freedom.
Merkel has previously said Berlin would not give in to the kidnappers' demands.
Germany is struggling to cope with a new threat from hostage-takers in Afghanistan and Iraq.
This has forced the government to take a new look at how it deals with kidnappers, with some hard-liners insisting that all consideration of ransom payments must stop.
Berlin's official line, repeated on numerous occasions in recent weeks, is that it will not bow to militant demands.
"We undertake everything in our power, pursue every responsible avenue to protect the lives of German citizens," government spokesman Thomas Steg said this week. "Our stance is unchanged. The German government cannot be blackmailed."
But it is an open secret that Germany has paid in the past.