Afghan Taliban say kidnapped US professor is seriously ill
Taliban spokesperson says Kevin King is suffering from dangerous heart disease and kidney problem
KABUL:
The Afghan Taliban said on Monday that Kevin King, one of two professors from the American University of Afghanistan who were kidnapped at gunpoint in Kabul last year, is seriously ill and needs urgent medical attention.
Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said King, an American, was suffering from "dangerous" heart disease and kidney problem.
"His illness has intensified, his feet have swollen and sometimes he becomes unconscious and his condition worsens every day," Mujahid said in a statement. "We have tried to treat him time to time but we do not have medical facilities as we are in a war situation," he added.
Freed US hostage disputes all accounts of her family's captivity
King and his Australian colleague Timothy Weeks were kidnapped in August 2016 as they were returning to their compound in the Afghan capital. Afghan and Western officials believe they are being held by
the Haqqani network, a militant group affiliated with the
Taliban which has carried out many previous kidnappings. They
acknowledge that an unsuccessful rescue attempt was made in
eastern Afghanistan months after the two were taken.
The Taliban statement came around two weeks after Pakistani
troops rescued Canadian Joshua Boyle and his American wife
Caitlan Coleman, who had been held by the Haqqanis since being
kidnapped in 2012, from an area near the Afghan border.
Earlier this year, the Taliban released a video of King and Weeks, showing them pleading with their government to release Taliban prisoners in turn for their freedom. Kidnapping high profile targets has become a lucrative business for the Taliban and other militant groups in Afghanistan who in return often demand huge ransom or release of their members.
The Afghan Taliban said on Monday that Kevin King, one of two professors from the American University of Afghanistan who were kidnapped at gunpoint in Kabul last year, is seriously ill and needs urgent medical attention.
Taliban spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said King, an American, was suffering from "dangerous" heart disease and kidney problem.
"His illness has intensified, his feet have swollen and sometimes he becomes unconscious and his condition worsens every day," Mujahid said in a statement. "We have tried to treat him time to time but we do not have medical facilities as we are in a war situation," he added.
Freed US hostage disputes all accounts of her family's captivity
King and his Australian colleague Timothy Weeks were kidnapped in August 2016 as they were returning to their compound in the Afghan capital. Afghan and Western officials believe they are being held by
the Haqqani network, a militant group affiliated with the
Taliban which has carried out many previous kidnappings. They
acknowledge that an unsuccessful rescue attempt was made in
eastern Afghanistan months after the two were taken.
The Taliban statement came around two weeks after Pakistani
troops rescued Canadian Joshua Boyle and his American wife
Caitlan Coleman, who had been held by the Haqqanis since being
kidnapped in 2012, from an area near the Afghan border.
Earlier this year, the Taliban released a video of King and Weeks, showing them pleading with their government to release Taliban prisoners in turn for their freedom. Kidnapping high profile targets has become a lucrative business for the Taliban and other militant groups in Afghanistan who in return often demand huge ransom or release of their members.