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Indians stranded in Iraq: Kin appeal to foreign min for help

The workers, mostly from Punjab and other parts of north India, were working on a construction project in Mosul

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Press Trust of India Amritsar
Family members of some of the youths from Punjab who are stuck in Iraq following violence unleashed there by Islamist militants have urged the Centre to ensure the safe and early return of the Indian nationals.

The workers, mostly from Punjab and other parts of north India, were working on a construction project in Mosul in northern Iraq, which has been captured by Sunni militant group, ISIS. There are about 40 Punjabi boys in Mosul who were working there for the last 10 months for a company called Tarikh Noor-ul-Huda.

The panic-stricken family members of six such youths, living in villages near Amritsar, have appealed to the Centre for help in securing their early return.
 
A resident of Majitha village, Gurpinder Kaur said that her brother Manjinder Singh was lured by a travel agent who first sent him to Dubai but later put him in Iraq, where he has now got stuck. Manjinder was among the youths from Punjab working with one of the Iraqi companies which were closed down after the area was captured by militants.

Kaur said that her brother had called her two days back and said that the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militants were taking care of them and wanted to help them leave Iraq.

She said she was in touch with the Indian embassy in Baghdad and had also sent a request to External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj seeking assistance in the matter from the government.

But she added that the Ministry of External Affairs was yet to provide any information about the Punjabi youths stranded in Iraq.

However, the Union Government had told them that it has sent officials to Iraq for negotiations.

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First Published: Jun 19 2014 | 1:41 PM IST

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