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Shams ul-Rahman, the deputy governor of Badakhshan province, said the hostages were being held in Gulati, a village in Shahri Buzurg district. It is a mountainous and forested area near the Tajikistan border in extreme northern Afghanistan about 70 kilometers (44 miles) from the district center. "Mostly smugglers are based in those areas, but of course the smugglers have the support of the Taliban," Rahman said. He said Afghan elders in the area had worked to seek the release of the aid workers. "A group of elders was about to go to the village and start negotiations," Rahman said. "Based on intelligence reports that Afghan forces received, a successful operation was conducted that resulted in the release of the hostages and the killing of the kidnappers." Also Saturday, NATO and Afghan forces detained a militant commander who allegedly planned and coordinated an attack on a coalition base in eastern Khost province Friday. During the operation in the province's Sabari district, the troops also detained several other insurgents and seized an AK-47 and multiple magazines of ammunition, the coalition said. Militants detonated a truck bomb outside Forward Operating Base Salerno on Friday, then tried to storm the site, but coalition forces repelled the attack, killing 14 militants. No foreign or Afghan troops were killed during the attack, said NATO. The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, but the militant detained Saturday was a member of the Haqqani network, the coalition said. The Haqqani network, which is based in neighboring Pakistan and eastern Afghanistan, is allied with the Taliban and al-Qaida but operates fairly independently. It is considered the most dangerous militant group in Afghanistan and has carried out a series of high-profile attacks in the capital, Kabul. Elsewhere in Afghanistan, four Afghan policemen were killed in two explosions Friday evening and Saturday morning in the south. Both attacks involved bombs hidden in motorcycles that exploded as police vehicles were passing by in Tarin Kot, the capital of Uruzgan province, said Gulab Khan, the director of the criminal investigation department in the province. Each attack killed two policemen. Two other policemen were wounded in Saturday's blast, he said.
[Associated
Press;
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