Captive British aid worker killed in Pakistan

QUETTA, Pak­istan (AP) — The body of a British Red Cross worker held cap­tive in Pak­istan since Jan­u­ary was found in an orchard Sun­day, his throat slit and a note attached to his body say­ing he was killed because no ran­som was paid, police said.

Khalil Ras­jed Dale, 60, was man­ag­ing a health pro­gram in the city of Quetta in south­west­ern Pak­istan when armed men seized him from a street close to his office. The iden­ti­ties of his cap­tors are unknown, but the region is home to sep­a­ratist and Islamist mil­i­tants who have kid­napped for ran­som before.

The director-general of the Inter­na­tional Com­mit­tee of the Red Cross con­demned the “bar­baric act.”

All of us at the ICRC and at the British Red Cross share the grief and out­rage of Khalil’s fam­ily and friends,” said Yves Daccord.

Dale’s throat had been slit, accord­ing to Saf­dar Hus­sain, a doc­tor who exam­ined the body.

Quetta police chief Ahsan Mah­boob said the note attached to it read: “This is the body of Khalil who we have slaugh­tered for not pay­ing a ransom.”

Mil­i­tants and crim­i­nal gangs often kid­nap wealthy Pak­ista­nis and less com­monly, foreigners.

British For­eign Sec­re­tary William Hague con­demned Dale’s killing, and said “tire­less efforts” had been under way to secure his release after he was kidnapped.

Khalil had worked for the Red Cross for years, car­ry­ing out assign­ments in Soma­lia, Afghanistan and Iraq, the group said.

Quetta, the cap­i­tal of Baluchis­tan province, lies close to the Afghan bor­der and for decades has hosted thou­sands of refugees from that coun­try. The Red Cross oper­ates clin­ics in the city that treat peo­ple wounded in the war in Afghanistan, includ­ing Tal­iban insurgents.

A Pak­istani for­eign office state­ment con­demned the crime, promis­ing to bring its per­pe­tra­tors to jus­tice. How­ever, arrests for this type of crime are rare.

Much of Baluchis­tan and the tribal regions close to Afghanistan are out of Pak­istani gov­ern­ment con­trol, and make good places to keep hostages. Large ran­soms are often paid to secure their release, but such pay­ments are rarely confirmed.

Two Pak­istani intel­li­gence offi­cials in Quetta said they were inves­ti­gat­ing whether this could be the work of the Pak­istani Tal­iban. They spoke on con­di­tion of anonymity because they were not autho­rized to talk to the media.

There are at least four other for­eign­ers being held in Pakistan.

Last August, a 70-year-old Amer­i­can human­i­tar­ian aid worker was kid­napped from his house in the Pun­jabi city of Lahore. Al-Qaida claimed to be hold­ing the man, War­ren Wein­stein, and said in a video he would be released if the United States stopped airstrikes in Afghanistan, Pak­istan, Soma­lia and Yemen.

In March, a Swiss cou­ple held cap­tive for eight months by the Tal­iban turned up at an army check­point close to the Afghan bor­der. Insur­gents have claimed a large ran­som was paid to secure their free­dom. That has not been con­firmed by Pak­istani or Swiss author­i­ties, who are unlikely to acknowl­edge it even if they did.

The cou­ple was kid­napped in Baluchistan.

Also Sun­day, Amer­i­can mis­siles killed three sus­pected Islamist mil­i­tants shel­ter­ing in an aban­doned school in North Waziris­tan, said intel­li­gence offi­cials, who did not give their names because they were not autho­rized to speak to reporters.

Pakistan’s gov­ern­ment strongly con­demned the attack. In a state­ment, it said such attacks vio­late inter­na­tional law and Pakistan’s “ter­ri­to­r­ial integrity and sovereignty.”

The strike comes as the U.S. is try­ing to rebuild its rela­tion­ship with Pak­istan, which opposes the mis­sile attacks and has demanded they stop. The fre­quency of the attacks, which crit­ics say kill inno­cents and ener­gize the insur­gency, has dropped dra­mat­i­cally this year.

Asso­ci­ated Press Writer Rasool Dawar in Peshawar con­tributed to this report.

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