Masked men in military uniforms kidnapped 16 Turkish workers and engineers in Baghdad today, bundling them into several SUVs and speeding away, Iraqi security officials said.
They said the 16 are employed by a Turkish construction company contracted to build a sports complex in the sprawling Shiite district of Sadr City. The kidnappers stormed the construction site, where the workers were sleeping in caravans, and disarmed the guards before taking the workers away.
There were no reports of violence.
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Interior Ministry spokesman Saad Maan told The Associated Press that authorities are investigating the incident and that a contingent of security forces has been tasked with tracking down the kidnappers.
The Iraqi officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to speak to the media.
Neither the identity nor the motives of the kidnappers were immediately known.
Turkey recently began launching airstrikes against the Islamic State group in northern Iraq and allowing US warplanes to use bases in southeastern Turkey to strike the Sunni extremist group.
It launched a simultaneous air campaign in northern Iraq against the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, a Kurdish militant group.
The style and scale of kidnapping harkened back to the sectarian violence in Baghdad in 2006 and 2007, when Sunni and Shiite militants kidnapped followers of the other sect. In most cases, the bodies of those kidnapped were found a day or two later with marks of torture and a bullet wound to the head.
Baghdad has been torn by violence for over a decade now, with roadside bombs, suicide attacks and assassinations occurring almost daily. While kidnapping for ransom has continued, abductions on the scale seen Wednesday have been almost unheard of in the past few years.