This Article is From Feb 23, 2015

PM Modi Saved Me, Says Jesuit Aid Worker Released From Taliban Captivity

PM Modi Saved Me, Says Jesuit Aid Worker Released From Taliban Captivity

Fr Alexis Prem Kumar at New Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport on Sunday. (Agence France Presse photo)

New Delhi:

Father Alexis Prem Kumar, the head of a Jesuit organization, who returned to India nearly nine months after his abduction in Afghanistan, gave the credit of his return to Prime Minister Narendra Modi saying that it was because of him that he was here.

"This is because our Prime Minister Narendra Modi (that) I am here. He saved me. This evening he talked to me when I was at the Kabul Airport. Possibly, he took a lot of interest in rescuing me," Mr Kumar told reporters after arriving at Delhi airport on Sunday evening.

Earlier, the announcement of the release of the 47-year-old private aid worker from Tamil Nadu was made by Prime Minister Narendra Modi through tweets.

"Delighted at securing the release of Indian Jesuit priest Father Alexis Prem Kumar from captivity in Afghanistan," he tweeted.

"Have spoken to Father Alexis Prem Kumar. Informed happy family of Father Alexis Prem Kumar of his safe return after 8 months in captivity," he added.

Prem Kumar was abducted in Herat province in western Afghanistan by unidentified gunmen on June 2 last year.

"The matter of his release has been pursued by our leadership, including at the highest levels by the Prime Minister," External Affairs Ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said.

"Father Alexis Prem Kumar is now back in the safety of his homeland and arrangements are being made for him to rejoin his family soon," he added.

He expressed India's "deep gratitude to all those who worked tirelessly over the last 8 months to help in this humanitarian task of ensuring the safe release of one of our citizens".

At the time of his abduction, Prem Kumar was working with the Jesuit Refugee Service, an international NGO, and was engaged in the educational field in Afghanistan.

He was its Afghanistan Director and had been in the country for over three years.

He had accompanied teachers on a visit to a JRS-supported school for returnee refugees in Sohadat village, 25-km from the city of Herat. He was kidnapped from the school as he was about to return to Herat, the JRS had said then.

Before moving to Afghanistan, Kumar had worked for the JRS, serving Sri Lankan refugees in Tamil Nadu.

Four days after the abduction, Afghan authorities had announced that three Taliban members had been arrested in connection with the case.

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