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Officials were tight-lipped about Long Xiaowei's release though 'The News' daily reported that the government swapped more than a dozen Taliban prisoners for the Chinese national.
"Yes, a number of militants were freed to secure the release of the Chinese engineer," an official with knowledge of the deal told the newspaper. He refused to give the exact number of prisoners who were released.
"Efforts were intensified to secure his release before the President's (Asif Ali Zardari) upcoming visit to China. It's a gift to the people of China on the occasion of his visit and it is also expected that the President will take him (Long) along to China," the official said.
Long reached the Chinese embassy in the federal capital on Sunday, a day after he was freed by the local Taliban in the troubled northwestern Swat valley. Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan initially claimed Long was freed as a "goodwill gesture" but later admitted the government had freed some prisoners in exchange for the Chinese national. "Over the last one week, the government freed several Taliban prisoners but most of them were ordinary fighters.
Actually, a majority of the prisoners released hailed from Waziristan," Muslim Khan said.
A source close to Pakistani Taliban leader Maulana Fazlullah said 16 important militant commanders from Swat were released on Saturday by the authorities.
The Pakistan government was under immense pressure for securing the release of the Chinese engineer after the recent execution of Polish national Piotr Stanczak by Taliban militants in Darra Adam Khel region. Poland cancelled a visit by a Pakistani parliamentary delegation after Stanczak was beheaded by the militants.
Besides, pressure has been mounted on Pakistan by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon for securing the release of John Solecki, an American employee of the UN refugee agency who was recently kidnapped in Quetta.
Earlier efforts for securing the release of the Chinese engineer had been inconclusive as the government was unwilling to accept a demand by the Taliban for the release of 136 militants.


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This is not just swapping. But swapping of interest. commitments, acknowledgments and promises are all compromised and broken in everyday life. Nobody is Gandhi or Buddha nowadays to keep their promises.
this was very interesting to watch the barter trade of pkaistan with taliban, as they are two side of one coin. thus clearly indicate that, this country is known to terrorist and supported by china and other countries those who are having their vested interest in it. this shd be given special status as exporting/promoting terrorist to other nation subject to inducement.
Taliban is considered as a "hard-core militants outfi". As far as Pakistan is concerned, the released talibans are "ordinary fighters" because the whole country is infested by terrorist groups..
NOW IT IS CLEAR LIKE CRYSTAL THE ROLE OF CHINA AND PAKISTAN IN TERRORISM ACTIVITIES AROUND THE WORLD.









