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New Indian govt struggles with Iraq \\\'kidnap\\\' crisis

Thursday, 19 June 2014


India's new government struggled on Thursday to make headway in its 1st foreign crisis as it tried to secure the release of 40 construction workers being held in violence-hit Iraq, home to some 10,000 Indian expatriates. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has already dispatched a former ambassador to Baghdad to coordinate rescue efforts while the chief minister of Punjab province – where most of the workers hail from – has said he is willing to pay a ransom to gain their freedom. But while India’s foreign ministry has described the men as having been ‘kidnapped’, it says it does not know who has taken them hostage, where they are being held and that it has not received any ransom demand. The ministry said it was working with the Red Crescent Society and other aid groups in Iraq, but acknowledged the situation on the ground was ‘very difficult’. Iraqi Red Crescent president Yaseen Ahmed Abbas said the group had been taken away in several vehicles by armed men while they were working on a stadium in Mosul but the exact identity of their captors was not known, according to AFP.