SEOUL - South Korea has identified the hostage killed in Afghanistan as Bae
Hyung-kyu, a Christian pastor who was the leader of the group of 22 other church
volunteers kidnapped by Taliban insurgents.
 Bae
Hyeong-gyu, 42, one of the kidnapped South Koreans in Afghanistan is seen
in this handout picture released July 21, 2007 in Seoul. [Reuters]
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Bae's bullet-riddled body was
found on Wednesday, the day South Korean media said he would have turned 42.
The Taliban said the South Korean government had not been acting in good
faith and threatened to kill more of the Korean hostages if its demands were not
met.
Bae, a married man with a nine-year-old daughter, was from a devout Christian
family from the island province of Jeju. He went to theology school and became a
pastor about six years ago.
Bae, whose father is a church elder in Jeju, was a founding member of the
Saemmul Church south of Seoul, which sent the volunteers to Afghanistan. He led
services for younger members of its congregation, reports quoted people who knew
him as saying.
"He was close to many members of the church, because he was always generous
enough to help with the prayers of each of the 300 members of the youth
division," Yonhap news quoted an acquaintance as saying.
He is believed to have suffered from a respiratory ailment but he was well
enough to lead the group abroad, a Saemmul church official said.
Bae was travelling on a bus with 22 other Koreans - 18 of whom are women -
when Taliban insurgents took the group hostage on Friday on the main road south
from Kabul.
Bae was the oldest member of the group that went despite warnings from Seoul
not to go due to security concerns.
A Taliban spokesman said Bae had been killed in a desert area in the Qarabagh
district of Ghazni close to where the group had been abducted.