( Reuters ) - Taliban and South Korean negotiators on Tuesday resumed talks on the fate of the remaining 19 Korean hostages held by the militant group in Afghanistan, provincial officials said.
The talks failed nearly two weeks ago after the Korean team told the Taliban it could not fulfill the group's main demand to free Taliban prisoners jailed by the Afghan government in return for the freedom of the hostages, most of whom are women.
The Taliban Islamic movement seized the 23 Korean Christian volunteers on July 19 from a bus in Ghazni province. The group has killed two male hostages after a series of deadlines, but freed two female captives as a gesture of goodwill during the first round of talks.
Korean and Taliban emissaries resumed the talks after the arrival of Taliban's delegation in Ghazni, provincial officials said.
Ghazni's governor Merajuddin Pattan earlier told Reuters the talks would resume on Tuesday, but did not give further details.
The kidnapping of the Koreans is the largest case of abductions in the resurgent Taliban's campaign since U.S.-led troops toppled the group from power in 2001.
It came a day after Taliban fighters seized two German aid workers and their five Afghan colleagues from Wardak province, which like Ghazni lies to the southwest of Kabul.
The Taliban have killed one of the Germans, but are still holding the other along with four Afghans. One Afghan managed to escape. The Taliban are demanding the withdrawal of German troops serving under NATO's command from Afghanistan for freeing the German.
Germany has ruled out the Taliban condition.