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American U.N. worker who was kidnapped is freed in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - An American U.N. worker abducted more than two months ago turned up unharmed yesterday, lying alongside a road in western Pakistan with his hands and feet bound and pleading, "Help me, help me," the man who found him said.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - An American U.N. worker abducted more than two months ago turned up unharmed yesterday, lying alongside a road in western Pakistan with his hands and feet bound and pleading, "Help me, help me," the man who found him said.

John Solecki was discovered abandoned in a village some 30 miles south of Quetta near the Afghan border after his captors called a local news agency to tell it where to look, officials said.

Mohammed Anwar, the owner of a restaurant alongside the main Quetta-Karachi highway, said that he found a bound Solecki lying in the dirt near a wall. Anwar said he heard a voice in the evening gloom saying, "Help me, help me," in English.

Solecki made no public comment. Police and U.N. officials declined to discuss what led to his release. U.N. officials who met with him yesterday reported that he was "tired but all right," U.N. spokeswoman Jennifer Pagonis said.

Solecki, who headed the U.N. refugee agency's operations in Quetta, would be reunited with his family "as soon as possible," Pagonis said, declining to say when he would leave Pakistan or whether he planned to return.

Solecki's release was a rare piece of good news amid intensifying violence that has raised international alarm over the nuclear-armed country's stability. Yesterday, a suicide bomber attacked a paramilitary base in the capital, killing eight.

Solecki's abduction and the killing of his driver on Feb. 2 in Quetta raised concern that he was another victim in a spate of attacks on foreigners blamed on Islamist militants operating from strongholds along the Afghan frontier.

A previously unknown group, the Baluchistan Liberation United Front, had claimed responsibility for the abduction, threatening to behead him and issuing a grainy video of a blindfolded Solecki pleading for help.

But the group's name and demands indicated they were ethnic Baluch separatists who have been waging a long low-level insurgency in the impoverished but oil-rich southwest of Pakistan and have no record of taking or killing Western hostages.

The kidnappers had demanded the release of hundreds of people from alleged detention by Pakistani security agencies.

The suicide bomber who attacked the base in Islamabad sneaked in after dark from a wooded area at the rear and detonated his explosives inside one of several large tents used as sleeping quarters.

Four members of the paramilitary Frontier Constabulary, many of whose members are assigned to guard foreign embassies and VIPs in the city, were wounded, senior police official Bin Yamin said. There was no claim of responsibility for the attack. However, the leader of a Taliban faction accused of ties to al-Qaeda warned Wednesday that militants would strike soon in Islamabad.