Australian aid worker kidnapped in Afghanistan freed

An Australian aid worker kidnapped in the Afghan capital of Kabul last November has been released, the Australian government has confirmed to CNN.

“An Australian woman kidnapped in Afghanistan has been released. We thank the authorities in Afghanistan for their support and assistance,” a spokesman for Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said in a statement.

“The Australian Government has provided ongoing consular support. Her family welcomes her safe return and asks that the media respect their privacy at this time.”

The woman was seized in Kabul’s Qala-e-Fatullah area by unknown gunmen in November as she was traveling by car with her driver, Basir Mujahid, a spokesman for Kabul’s police chief said at the time.

The woman, who is an Australian citizen of Pakistani descent, worked for the Agency Coordinating Body for Afghan Relief (ACBAR,) which describes itself as an Afghan independent body bringing together more than 150 national and international NGOs operating in the country.

The agency declined to comment on her release.

Kidnapping rife

Both Afghans and foreigners face the risk of abduction in Afghanistan, with two previous cases in 2016 also involving Australians.

An Australian aid worker was abducted from her home in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in April, but was freed in August. Afghanistan’s National Directorate of Security said Kerry Jane Wilson was released after it conducted a special operation.

An American and an Australian were also kidnapped from American University in Kabul in August. A rescue attempt by US Special Operations Forces from SEAL Team 6 failed when they were not found at the location targeted.

In June, nearly 200 people were kidnapped by Taliban fighters in Afghanistan’s northeastern province of Kunduz, police said. The majority were released but the fighters killed several people and kept around 20 hostage.

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