India said Friday it was still
searching for 39 construction workers abducted in Iraq in June, denying a
report claiming they had been executed by the Islamic State group.
Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj urged
the workers’ families not to lose hope, despite not knowing the whereabouts of
the men who were rounded up by jihadists in Mosul city.
In a speech to parliament, Swaraj
said “six sources” based in Iraq had assured her that the workers were still
alive.
“At least six sources have told us
they have not been killed. We have not got any proof of this but then there is
no proof either that they are dead,” she told parliament amid uproar from
opposition MPs over the report.
TV network ABP News late Thursday
quoted two Bangladeshi workers who claimed the jihadists had executed all 39
Indians.
The Bangladeshis, who had also been
kidnapped but were later released, claimed to have spoken with one of the
Indians who escaped from the jihadists and who witnessed the killings.
The construction workers were among
dozens of foreign nationals swept up in the initial onslaught by the
organisation in June, when the jihadists overran large swathes of territory and
captured Mosul.
“We have not been able to establish
direct contact with the hostages. But I urge everyone not to accept reports of
their deaths,” Swaraj told the upper house.
“The Bangladeshi nationals who are
being quoted in reports are not eye-witnesses… We will continue with our search
even if there is just one percent chance of them being alive.
“Our efforts to find them are on day
and night.”
Some 46 Indian nurses also trapped in
the conflict were freed in July, but there has been no breakthrough in the
search for the construction workers, who are mostly from poor families in
Punjab and Haryana states.
The jihadists have carried out a
series of mass executions and other atrocities against locals and foreigners
since the June offensive.
Iraqi security forces wilted under
the initial onslaught, but are now backed by US-led air strikes, international
advisers, Shiite militiamen and Sunni tribes, and have begun to claw back some
areas.
But three key cities — Mosul, Tikrit
and Fallujah — are still in militant hands, as are a slew of villages and other
areas.
Vanguard News
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