Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

This April 9, 1996, file photo shows journalist David Rohde in Kravice, Bosnia.The Associated Press

An Afghan man has been brought to the United States to face charges in the 2008 gunpoint kidnapping of a journalist for The New York Times, an Afghan journalist and a driver in Afghanistan, federal authorities announced Wednesday.

The charges against Haji Najibullah, 42, were in a six-count indictment unsealed in Manhattan federal court.

He briefly appeared at a hearing conducted electronically because of the coronavirus, where a U.S. magistrate judge ordered him detained after his court-appointed lawyer, Mark Gombiner, declined to seek bail. Mr. Gombiner did not respond to a message seeking comment.

A prosecutor said Mr. Najibullah was brought from Ukraine to the United States on Tuesday to face charges including hostage taking, conspiracy and kidnapping. Authorities did not say where or when he was first arrested, but in a release they thanked Ukrainian authorities for help in his arrest and transfer. If convicted, he could face life in prison.

The kidnapping victims were not identified by authorities, but the description matched the kidnapping of the journalist, David Rohde, who worked for the Times, and an Afghan journalist, Tahir Ludin, as they were heading to interview a Taliban leader.

Both made a dramatic escape from a Taliban-controlled compound in Pakistan’s tribal areas more than seven months after their Nov. 10, 2008, kidnapping. Their driver, Asadullah Mangal, was the third kidnapping victim and escaped a few weeks after Mr. Ludin and Mr. Rohde.

According to an indictment, Mr. Najibullah was among several kidnappers armed with machine-guns who took the men hostage before forcing them five days later to hike across the border from Afghanistan to Pakistan.

Mr. Najibullah and other kidnappers forced the victims to make numerous calls and videos seeking help during their captivity as they demanded money from Mr. Rohde’s family and the release of Taliban prisoners by the U.S., the indictment said.

It said Mr. Najibullah and others forced the victims to create at least three videos in which they begged for help while surrounded by masked, machine-gun-toting guards. It said Mr. Najibullah recorded a video in which Mr. Rohde was forced to beg for his life while a guard pointed the barrel of a machine-gun at his face.

Also charged in the indictment was Timor Shah, who was described as the head guard of the hostages, and Akhund Zada, who the indictment said was among six armed guards who forced the hostages to hike from Afghanistan to Pakistan. Neither were in custody.

The indictment had been sealed since 2014, when it was obtained by then-U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara. Also in 2014, the Times reported that Mr. Najibullah led a group described as a radical spinoff of the Taliban with a history of targeting journalists.

In 2009, Mr. Ludin told The Associated Press in interviews that he was hired by the Times to arrange the interview with a Taliban leader and to translate. At the time, he worked as a journalist mostly for the Times of London.

Mr. Ludin said he was beaten and repeatedly threatened by captors whose demands kept changing. Mr. Rohde told Mr. Ludin he had not been beaten, and Mr. Ludin said he had not seen any evidence Mr. Rohde was harmed.

The men escaped their captors by climbing over the wall of a compound where they were held in the North Waziristan region of Pakistan.

“Journalists risk their lives bringing us news from conflict zones, and no matter how much time may pass, our resolve to find and hold accountable those who target and harm them and other Americans will never wane,” Assistant Attorney-General for National Security John C. Demers said.

Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe