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Taliban free six Pakistani chopper crew

The Afghan Taliban has freed five Pakistanis and a Russian captured after their government helicopter crashed in eastern Afghanistan.

File image of a Pakistani government helicopter.
File image of a Pakistani government helicopter. Source: AAP

Five Pakistanis and a Russian who were captured by the Afghan Taliban after their government helicopter crashed in eastern Afghanistan have been released and returned to Pakistan.

The Russian-made transport helicopter belonging to the Punjab provincial government was en route from Peshawar in northwest Pakistan to Uzbekistan for maintenance on August 4, when it suffered a technical failure and crash-landed in the Taliban-held Logar province in eastern Afghanistan earlier this month.

The crew's release was arranged through a handover between tribes in the border region, from where they were transferred to Islamabad by helicopter, the Pakistan's foreign ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

"The six member crew of Punjab government helicopter that went missing in Afghanistan on 4th August 2016 has been recovered and arrived in Islamabad today," it said.

Whereas Pakistan acknowledges that it wields some influence with the Afghan Taliban, it denies Afghan and US accusations that it provides support and sanctuary for the Afghan Taliban and its leaders.

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Pakistan says it has been a victim of terrorism, much of it from groups based in Afghanistan, for years.

Initial reports after the crash had indicated that there were seven passengers but Foreign Ministry spokesman Nafees Zakaria said on Saturday that it turned out there were only six on board.

One of the seven people listed on the flight manifest had been unwell and decided not to fly, a ministry official said on condition of anonymity.


2 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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