Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
India

Iraq Survivor Harjit Masih Says Islamic State Killed 39 Indian Hostages, Sushma Swaraj Denies

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2015 10:54 AM
    A man from Punjab who escaped from the clutches of the ISIS in June 2014 claimed on Thursday that 39 Indians taken hostage have been killed.
     
    External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said in New Delhi that she did not believe the claims and her own sources felt the Indian nationals were still alive.
     
    Harjit Masih, 25, told the media in Mohali town adjoining Chandigarh and claimed that the 39 Indians, mostly from Punjab, were attacked by the ISIS terrorists and killed.
     
    "The ISIS came and kidnapped us and took us to another place. We were 40 Indians and about 50 Bangladeshis. They assured us that our passports would come and we will be allowed to leave for India," Masih said.
     
    "They (ISIS) handed us over to another group (of terrorists) who took us to another place. Later, they put us in a room and started firing. Everyone around me fell. I kept lying there and later escaped," he said.
     
    In New Delhi, Sushma Swaraj disputed Masih's claims and said her sources had not indicated that the Indian nationals were dead.
     
    "We are not sparing any efforts to find them. We are hopeful that we will be able to find them and bring them back home. I have eight different sources who are saying they are alive," Sushma Swaraj told the media after families of the hostages met her in New Delhi on Thursday.
     
    "Harjit Masih left our protection on his own. He was not under detection," Sushma Swaraj said.
     
    The family of Masih had earlier claimed that he was kept under detention after his escape and return from Iraq.
     
    "There is no reason to believe him. If we believe him, it will mean that we end our search. I don't want to give up hope on this and we are looking for proof," Sushma Swaraj said.
     
    The Indian nationals were taken hostage by the ISIS on June 11 last year in northern Iraq's Mosul town.
     
    Their families have met Sushma Swaraj and other leaders in New Delhi and Chandigarh to know the whereabouts of their kin stuck in Iraq.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Parliament House getting worn: Should a new one be built?

    Parliament House getting worn: Should a new one be built?
    From the outside it looks imposing and its unique circular shape makes it one of the landmarks of the Indian capital and a prime tourist attraction. But the 87-year-old Parliament House...

    Parliament House getting worn: Should a new one be built?

    Maharashtra youth who joined ISIS returns, being quizzed

    Maharashtra youth who joined ISIS returns, being quizzed
    A youth from Maharashtra, who joined the terror group Islamic State (IS) in Iraq, Friday returned home to India and was being questioned by intelligence agencies....

    Maharashtra youth who joined ISIS returns, being quizzed

    No concrete proof of abducted Indians' fate, search on: Sushma

    No concrete proof of abducted Indians' fate, search on: Sushma
    Amid media reports that the 39 abducted Indian workers in Iraq have been killed by Islamic State militants, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj Friday...

    No concrete proof of abducted Indians' fate, search on: Sushma

    Jammu gunfight ends, 11 killed

    Eleven people were killed in heavy firing between the security forces and infiltrators in Jammu and Kashmir which restarted Friday. The gunfight has...

    Jammu gunfight ends, 11 killed

    Navjot Singh Sidhu At The Centre Of Akali Dal-BJP Shadow Boxing

    Navjot Singh Sidhu At The Centre Of Akali Dal-BJP Shadow Boxing
    In the last couple of months, the "time-tested" ruling alliance of the Shiromani Akali Dal and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is feeling the strain, forcing senior leaders from both sides to step in and claim that all is well.

    Navjot Singh Sidhu At The Centre Of Akali Dal-BJP Shadow Boxing

    Modi, Sharif Bonhomie Gives Fresh Boost To SAARC

    Modi, Sharif Bonhomie Gives Fresh Boost To SAARC
    In a final ice-breaking moment that gave a huge boost to Saarc and floundering regional cooperation, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi shook hands with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif, laughed and even patted him on the arm at the closing ceremony

    Modi, Sharif Bonhomie Gives Fresh Boost To SAARC