UPDATED ON:
Saturday, June 23, 2007
22:18 Mecca time, 19:18 GMT
 
News CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Hostages freed in Pakistan standoff
The hostages were released on Saturday after 
the authorities intervened [AFP]

Religious students at a mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan's capital, have released nine people who they had earlier kidnapped and accused of running a brothel.
 
The hostages, including six Chinese women, were released on Saturday after authorities intervened and allegedly gave assurances that the government would stop mixed-sex massage parlours.
Abdul Rashid Ghazi, a leader at the mosque, said the nine had been released in the interests of friendship between Pakistan and China.
 
"They [the women] have been released, they have gone," he told the Reuters news agency.
Religious students from Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, kidnapped the nine, including the six Chinese women, early on Saturday when they raided a massage parlour.
 
They accused the women of engaging in "immoral activities".
 
The 'kidnappers' belong to the Jamia Hafsa
seminary in Islamabad on Saturday [AFP]
The students said in a statement: "The foreign women were involved in prostitution in a massage centre".

Ghazi earlier said that the mosque had heard "that these women did massage for men, but it was more than that".
 
The students said they had "not kidnapped anyone but have brought six foreign women and three men to persuade them" to change their ways.
 
Residents of Pakistan's cosmopolitan capital have become increasingly concerned by the authorities' inability to tackle the "anti-vice" drives undertaken by students and clerics at the mosque.
 
On previous occasions students from the mosque have abducted and held police officers, but authorities are said to fear a backlash if any of the female students were hurt in an assault on the mosque.
 Source: Agencies
 
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