October 13 , 2017

News

Recovery of abducted family a ‘positive moment’ in Pak-US relations: Trump
* US president says Pakistan's cooperation is a sign that it is honouring America's wishes for it to do more to provide security in region

ISLAMABAD/WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump, who has been highly critical of Islamabad, praised Pakistan’s cooperation with the US government over the freeing of a kidnapped US-Canadian couple and their three children born in captivity, saying it represented “a positive moment” for US-Pakistan relations.

The family was freed in Pakistan, nearly five years after the couple was abducted in neighboring Afghanistan, Pakistani and US officials said on Thursday.

American Caitlan Coleman and her Canadian husband, Joshua Boyle, were kidnapped while backpacking in Afghanistan in 2012 by the Taliban-allied Haqqani network.

“The Pakistani government’s cooperation is a sign that it is honouring America’s wishes for it to do more to provide security in the region,” Trump said in a statement.

Trump’s chief of staff, John Kelly, drove home the dire conditions that the family had been subjected to during their long captivity.

“They’ve been essentially living in a hole for five years,” Kelly said. “That’s the kind of people we’re dealing with over there.”

It was unclear how precisely the Pakistani military secured the family’s release, which came after the United States shared intelligence about their location. It was also unclear when the family would return home.

Two US officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, told a foreign news agency that the US military had been ready to fly the family out of the country but said Boyle, who is Canadian, had refused to board the aircraft.

Boyle had once been married to the sister of a former inmate at the US military detention centre at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and CNN reported he might fear some kind of US legal prosecution.

As of Thursday evening, there was no indication the family had left Pakistan. Boyle’s parents said he told them by phone he would see them in a couple of days.

“So we’re waiting for that,” his mother, Linda Boyle, said in a video posted on the Toronto Star newspaper’s website.

The US officials expressed hope that the hostages’ freedom could represent a turning point in relations between Pakistan and the United States, uneasy allies in fighting Taliban and other extremists in the region. “The success underscores the importance of timely intelligence sharing and Pakistan’s continued commitment towards fighting this menace through cooperation between two forces against a common enemy,” a Pakistani army statement said of the release.

 

 

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

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