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British couple held for months by Taliban released from prison | British couple held for months by Taliban released from prison |
(32 minutes later) | |
Barbie and Peter Reynolds (right) will first fly to Qatar for medical checks, before returning to the UK | |
A British couple who were detained for nearly eight months by the Taliban in Afghanistan have been released. | |
Peter Reynolds, 80, and his wife Barbie, 76, who have lived in the country for nearly two decades, were on their way home when they were stopped on 1 February. | |
The couple were freed through Qatari mediation. A Qatari official said they would fly to Qatar for medical checks before travelling on to the UK, despite having a long-term home in Afghanistan's Bamiyan province. | |
The Taliban has not disclosed the reason for their detention, despite four court appearances. | |
The pair had married in Kabul in 1970 and spent the past 18 years running a charitable training programme that had been approved by local Taliban officials when the armed group reclaimed power in 2021. | |
They have been described by family as having a lifelong love of Afghanistan, typified by their decision to remain there after the authoritarian regime seized control in August 2021, when many other Westerners left. | |
Their release follows months of public lobbying by their family, who have described the harrowing conditions of their detention. | |
The couple's son, Jonathan Reynolds, told the BBC in July that his father had been suffering serious convulsion and his mother was "numb" from anaemia and malnutrition | |
Their couple's daughter, Sarah Entwistle, previously said her father had suffered a mini-stroke, while the UN warned that without medical care the couple were at risk of irreparable harm. | |
Just six days ago, an American woman who was detained with them and subsequently released told the BBC they were "literally dying" in prison and that "time is running out". | Just six days ago, an American woman who was detained with them and subsequently released told the BBC they were "literally dying" in prison and that "time is running out". |
Faye Hall, who was let go two months into her detention, highlighted that the elderly couple's health had deteriorated rapidly while in prison. | Faye Hall, who was let go two months into her detention, highlighted that the elderly couple's health had deteriorated rapidly while in prison. |
Taliban officials maintained they received adequate medical care in prison and their human rights were respected. | |
The UK does not recognise the Taliban government and closed its embassy in Kabul when the group returned to power. | |
The Foreign Office says support for British nationals in Afghanistan is therefore "severely limited" and advises against all travel to the country. |