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Qatari mediation helps release four Tajik border guards from Taliban captivity - Asia-Plus | News from Tajikistan, Central Asia and the World

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Qatari mediation helps release four Tajik border guards from Taliban captivity

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DUSHANBE, June 15, 2015, Asia-Plus — Qatari mediation has helped release four Tajik border guards from Taliban captivity.

A statement released by the Qatari Ministry of Foreign Affairs on June 11 notes that under the directives of HH the Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, Qatari mediation succeeded in the release of four soldiers from Tajikistan who were captured by Taliban in December on the northern borders of Afghanistan.

The statement says Qatar”s efforts were out of the state”s commitment to humanitarian values.  The statement added that the State of Qatar is using all its resources and diplomacy to save lives.  The Ministry also praised all parties involved in the process.

We will recall that four Tajik border guards have spent in the Taliban captivity for more than six months.

The four conscripts were kidnapped on December 19, 2014 along the wide and twisting Panj River, which marks the border between Tajikistan and Afghanistan.  Their commander had sent them to search for firewood – reportedly on the Afghan side of the river.  All four served in Unit 2610 of the Panj Border Service detachment, an area rife with drug smuggling.  When they were captured, the young men were all between 19 and 24 years old.

Officials have said the captured conscripts are fine, that they are being held by the Taliban and that negotiations are ongoing.  But the families of Farhod Kalonov, Tuichiboy Nourboyev, Mehroj Shodiyev and Sirojiddin Davlatov were nevertheless despairing, according to EurasiaNet.org.  And critics said the government was not doing enough to secure their release.

“The [captured] border guards are healthy and alive. We continue negotiations about their release, but the Taliban have not named their conditions,” a source at the Main Border Guard Directorate, which operates under the State Committee for National Security (SCNS), told EurasiaNet.org on June 8 on condition of anonymity.  He said the Tajik conscripts were kidnapped on the Afghan side of the border, in a remote area where the river is wide, shallow and poorly guarded.  The source insisted Tajik security officials are working with their Afghan counterparts to secure the conscripts’ release, but would not provide operational details.

In May, reports emerged from Afghanistan that the kidnappers had been killed in a firefight with Afghan government forces.  Fighting in the region has been fierce this spring.  But a month later, there is still no information about bringing them home.

Islomiddin Davlatov, 67, the father of 24-year-old Sirojiddin, told EurasiaNet.org that he talked to his son only once, six days after he was captured.

“We have addressed the president. … His security advisor, Sherali Khairulloyev, told us that research and negotiations continue.  What else can we do?” a tearful Davlatov told EurasiaNet.org.  He added that he had not had an update from the Border Guard Directorate for a month.

Fathullo Shodiyev, the father of 21-year-old Mehroj, told EurasiaNet.org he has approached anyone who will listen in government, including the military recruitment office, the Border Guard Directorate and the president’s office, begging for help.

“I found out my son was captured 40 days after it happened – from him directly, when he managed to call us. He called, asked about our health, and then told us, ‘I was captured by mujahedeen while collecting firewood for our commander.  About 20 Afghans surrounded us and took us to Afghanistan,’” the father recounted.

Mehroj then handed the phone to his Afghan captor.  The Afghan said he wished not for money, but for a prisoner exchange, the elder Shodiyev said.  Reportedly, an Afghan citizen who was detained in Panj District on drug smuggling charges shortly after the kidnapping is related to one of the captors.

The elder Shodiyev says Mehroj called several times, but could only say he was alive. Every time Shodiyev tried to call back the numbers his son called from, they were not available. The last time they spoke was on March 28.

On April 6, a military court sentenced Alimuhammad Dodokalonov, acting chief of the Panj Border Service detachment at the time, to an eight-and-a-half-year prison term.  He was found guilty of abuse of power, forgery and illegal logging.  The military post driver, Umedjon Sanginov, who escorted the conscripts, was fined 28,000 somoni ($4,500), Radio Liberty’s Tajik Service reported.

EurasiaNet.org notes that Tajikistan’s Border Guard Directorate has a reputation for its sticky-fingered officials who act with impunity in remote locations.  And the Panj district is a known drug-smuggling route, where Afghan narcotics make it across the border by the ton for onward shipment to Russia.  In 2013, five security officials at the Panj Border Detachment were arrested during a sting that netted 45 kilos of heroin and 66 kilos of hashish, local media outlets reported.

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