Gulf News

Several US citizens missing in Iraq

EMBASSY CONFIRMS CLAIMS AMID REPORTS IN LOCAL MEDIA THAT SOME AMERICANS HAD BEEN ABDUCTED

-

The US Embassy confirmed on Sunday that “several” Americans have gone missing in Iraq, after local media reported that three Americans had been kidnapped in Baghdad.

US Embassy spokesman Scott Bolz said, “We are working in full cooperatio­n with Iraqi authoritie­s to locate the missing Americans.”

Bolz did not identify the missing Americans or say what they were doing in Iraq.

State Department spokesman John Kirby said that “due to privacy considerat­ions” he had nothing further to add about the missing Americans. “The safety and security of Americans abroad is our highest priority,” Kirby said.

The comments by US officials came after the Arab news channel, Al Arabiya, citing its own sources, reported that three Americans had been kidnapped by militias in Baghdad.

Iraqi media reports said the Americans went missing in south Baghdad on their way to Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport. A Western security official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to brief the media, said on Sunday that he had been told that three Americans went missing 24 to 48 hours ago.

There were no immediate claims of responsibi­lity. Kidnapping­s in Iraq have been carried out by Daesh and Shiite militias as well as criminal gangs demanding ransom payments or disgruntle­d employees seeking to resolve workplace disputes.

The incident comes after

a week that has seen a deteriorat­ion of security in and around the Iraqi capital after months of relative calm.

Daesh attacks

Daesh claimed a number of attacks in Baghdad and neighbouri­ng Diyala province last week that killed more than 50 people, including a high profile attack on a mall in the Iraqi capital. The string of Daesh attacks on civilian targets within areas of Iraqi government control follow battlefiel­d losses, most recently in western Iraq. Last month, Iraqi troops pushed Daesh terrorists out of the centre of Ramadi, the provincial capital of Anbar province in Iraq’s Sunni heartland.

In acts of apparent reprisal, armed gangs that residents identified as Shiite militias attacked Sunni owned businesses and mosques in Diyala province just north of Baghdad. After Daesh was pushed out of the province, security there was left almost entirely in the hands of Shiite militias.

Responding to a call to arms from Shiite clerics in Iraq after Daesh swept across the country’s northern and western provinces in the summer of 2014, Shiite militias in Iraq now wield more power than the country’s regular security forces and military.

Kidnapping­s in Iraq have been carried out by Daesh and Shiite militias as well as criminal gangs demanding ransom.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates