Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Harjit Masih was lying, says Swaraj on his escape story

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes

KALA AFGHANA (BATALA)/NEW DELHI: External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj dismissed as a lie on Tuesday a claim by the lone Indian worker who escaped from the Islamic State (IS) that the remaining 39 captives had been shot dead days after being taken hostage.

“He was not willing to tell me how he escaped,” Swaraj said in the Rajya Sabha, adding she had concrete evidence that Harjit Masih had lied.

“Masih had escaped along with Bangladesh­is with the help of a caterer using a fake name, Ali. The details were revealed to me by Masih’s employer and the caterer who helped him,” said the minister, who told the House on Tuesday that the government had received confirmati­on that the 39 captives had died .

According to Masih, 40 Indians including him who had been taken captive by the IS on June 15, 2014 were taken to a hilltop and shot. He said he was hit in the leg and survived by feigning death. Swaraj, however, said Masih had “cooked up” his escape story. But Masih stood his ground on Tuesday. “I think government knew about the deaths, but due to political reasons they did not go public with it,” he said.

The only bread earner in a family of four, Masih is a resident of the village of Kala Afghana in Gurdaspur district of Punjab.

Narrating his tale in 2017, Masih said, “Everything was fine till May of 2014. We enjoyed our work at a factory, though some incidents of firing by IS militants happened in the outer parts of Mosul. But a month later, they

RAHUL GANDHI, Congress chief

entered the factory and kidnapped all of us.”

“We were shifted to a place I could not identify,” he told HT then. “On that fateful day, they forced us to sit on our knees, in a row, and opened fire. I received a shot in my right leg and was covered with bodies. I fell unconsciou­s. Next day, when I regained consciousn­ess, I found all my fellow workers dead.”

“After a few days of walking, I managed to reach a Bangladesh­i relief camp and was rushed to hospital. A week later, I returned to India.”

A case was lodged against Masih after families of the missing 39 Indians registered a complaint against him. “Now, since the government has admitted that the men are dead, the case against me should be withdrawn,” he said.

The govt ensured the release of an oil tanker with 22 Indians on boards that had been hijacked by pirates off the coast of West Africa was freed. India thanked the government­s of Benin and Nigeria for their assistance in resolving the week-long crisis.

Father Tom Uzhunnalil, a priest from Kerala, who was kidnapped by Islamic State- affiliated terrorists in Yemen, was released after over a year in captivity. Oman played a key role in release.

Indian aid worker Judith D’souza was rescued more than a month after she was kidnapped in Kabul. D’souza had been working in Kabul and was due to return to India in a week on June 9 when she was kidnapped at gunpoint.

46 nurses returned home after being held captive by IS militants in Iraq for 23 days. They were working in a hospital in Tikrit, located 140 kilometres northwest of Baghdad. Later, they were taken to Mosul. The govt had said it used ‘unconventi­onal measures’ to secure their release

 ?? HT FILE ?? Judith D'souza arrives in New Delhi after her rescue.
HT FILE Judith D'souza arrives in New Delhi after her rescue.

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