New Delhi: India said Friday it was knocking on all doors and not just in Iraq to free the Indian workers abducted there, as one of them escaped from the custody of suspected Sunni insurgents.
As the kidnap saga entered a second week, the external affairs ministry indicated that the government would go to any length to resolve its first major crisis.
We are knocking on all doors… front doors, back doors and trap doors for freeing the 40 Indians [in Mosul], ministry spokesman Syed Akbaruddin said here. Knocking on all doors does not just mean doors in Iraq.
We are working with Iraqi authorities, he said, but underlined that the situation was not easy.
The spokesman confirmed that one of the Indians had escaped and contacted the Indian embassy in Baghdad but did not give his present whereabouts.
No option is off the table when lives of our nationals are involved, he said without elaborating.
Forty Indians working for a Turkish construction company were seized in Mosul a week ago after hardline Sunni insurgents took control of the area along with other key parts of Iraq.
The government reiterated Friday that all of them were safe but did not say if it knew where they were or who was holding them.
Meanwhile, Paramjit Singh, whose brother is among the abducted in Iraq, told IANS in Hoshiarpur Friday that he had learnt that the kidnappers had separated the Muslims from non-Muslims.
Paramjit Singh said he last spoke to his younger brother, Karamjit Singh, June 15. He added that scores of youths from Punjab and Haryana may be stranded or held captive in Iraq.
A Haryana government spokesman said in Chandigarh that 87 people from the state, mostly young men, were indeed stranded in strife-torn Iraq.
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