Foreign hostages in Iraq

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Members of the Iraqi insurgency began taking foreign hostages in Iraq beginning in April 2004. Since then, in a dramatic instance of Islamist kidnapping they have taken captive more than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis; among them, dozens of hostages were killed and others rescued or freed. In 2004, executions of captives were often filmed, and many were beheaded.[1] However, the number of the recorded killings decreased significantly. Many hostages remain missing with no clue as to their whereabouts. The United States Department of State Hostage Working Group was organized by the U.S. Embassy, Baghdad, in the summer of 2004 to monitor foreign hostages in Iraq.

The motives for these kidnappings include:

The following is a list of known civilian foreign hostages in Iraq.

Coalition

Australia

2 released/rescued

Bulgaria

2 killed

Czech Republic

3 released

Denmark

1 killed

Italy

4 killed

6 released

Japan

2 killed

3 released

Macedonia

3 killed

2 released

The Philippines

2 released

Poland

2 released

Romania

3 released

South Korea

1 killed

Ukraine

5 released

United Kingdom

5 killed

6 released/rescued

United States

11 killed

6 released/escaped

5 of unknown fate

Non-coalition

Algeria

2 killed

Austria

1 killed

Bangladesh

1 released

Brazil

1 killed

Canada

1 killed

6 released/escaped

1 of unknown fate

The People's Republic of China

15 released

Cyprus

1 released

Egypt

5 killed

16 released

1 of unknown fate

France

4 released

Germany

5 released

1 of unknown fate

India

49 released

Most of the nurses had recently immigrated to Iraq in search for better employment opportunities despite the ongoing war. The city of Tikrit had fallen under siege by ISIS, weeks prior to formal hostilities, in early June and the hospital had run out of food supplies which were later provided by an official of the Ministry of Health (Iraq). The official and two Iraqi soldiers who were guarding the hospital left days prior to the takeover by ISIS on June 29, as had the local Iraqi nurses weeks ago.[86] ISIS first moved the nurses to the hospital's basement and initially refused to hand them over. After negotiations by the Embassy of India in Baghdad, led by ambassador Ajay Kumar Amban and former ambassador B. B. Tyagi, the group agreed to release the hostages in Mosul. They were shifted to Mosul by ISIS and handed over to Indian officials on July 4, 2014, the officials took them to Erbil and they were flown out to India from the Erbil International Airport.[85][86] The majority of the nurses were from the state of Kerala and chief minister Oommen Chandy kept in touch with the hostages throughout the ordeal.[86] The nurses later stated they were treated well by ISIS militants, some of whom they had treated during the initial takeover of the Tikrit hospital.[87][86]
Two 2017 Indian films are based on the incident, Take Off (2017)[88][89] and Tiger Zinda Hai (2017).[85]

39 killed, 1 escaped

On 20 March 2018, Swaraj declared in the parliament that 39 missing Indian workers had been killed, "I have concrete proof that 39 Indians have been killed. We wanted to give the families closure". The physical remains of the dead were repatriated by the government in a special aircraft.[90]

Indonesia

4 released

Iran

7 released

Ireland

1 killed

1 released

Israel

1 of unknown fate

1 released

Jordan

2 released

6 of unknown fate

Kenya

3 released

2 of unknown fate

Lebanon

3 released

Morocco

2 killed

Nepal

12 killed

1 released

Palestine

1 of unknown fate

Pakistan

2 killed

13 released

Russia

4 killed

5 released

Somalia

1 released

South Africa

4 of unknown fate

Sri Lanka

1 released

Sudan

6 killed

9 released

Sweden

1 released

Switzerland

2 released

Syria

1 released

Turkey

5 killed

6 released

United Arab Emirates

1 released

See also

References

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External links

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Terrorist incidents in Iraq in the 21st century
  • Iraq War (2003–11)
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