Afghan prisoner in US custody freed in exchange for two Americans, Kabul says

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The Afghan citizen Khan Mohammad had been sentenced to life imprisonment by US courts and was serving his sentence in the state of California.

Afghan citizen Khan Mohammad had been sentenced to life imprisonment by US courts and was serving his sentence in the state of California.

PHOTO: AFP

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KABUL - An Afghan prisoner in US custody was freed in exchange for two American citizens, the authorities in Afghanistan said on Jan 21.

Afghan citizen Khan Mohammad had been sentenced to life imprisonment by US courts and was serving his sentence in the state of California, the foreign office said in a statement, adding that he was arrested nearly two decades ago in Afghanistan's eastern province of Nangarhar and extradited to the US.

It did not identify the US citizens or specify how many had been released. A spokesman for the Taliban administration, however confirmed that two Americans had been released, but declined to identify them.

CNN and the New York Times reported on Jan 19 that Americans Ryan Corbett and William McKenty were handed over and were on their way home early on Jan 21, exchanged for Afghan Taliban member Khan Mohammad who was convicted in 2008 on narco-terrorism charges.

Two other American captives remain in Afghanistan: Mr George Glezmann, a former airline mechanic, and Mr Mahmood Habibi, a naturalised American, who was seized soon after a US strike in Afghanistan killed Ayman al-Zawahri, the leader of Al-Qaeda, the New York Times said.

The prisoner exchange was years in the making and finally struck in the very last hours of Democratic former President Joe Biden’s time in office before Republican President Donald Trump took over on Jan 20, CNN reported.

The New York Times reported that Qatar helped negotiate the final deal and provided logistical support for the exchange.

Mr Corbett's family praised both the Trump and Biden administrations for the exchange but expressed regret that Mr Glezmann and Mr Habibi were also not freed, according to a statement cited in the New York Times. REUTERS

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