No adverse report about Indians held hostage by IS: V.K. Singh

May 09, 2016 12:00 am | Updated 05:48 am IST - Kottayam:

Minister of State for External Affairs General V.K. Singh addressing the media in Kottayam on Sunday.

Minister of State for External Affairs General V.K. Singh addressing the media in Kottayam on Sunday.

There is no “adverse” report about the 40 people from Punjab held hostage in Iraq by Islamic State militants and a Catholic priest from Kerala abducted by the same group in Yemen, the Centre said on Sunday.

“There is no confirmation whether he is dead or he is alive....Anything adverse is not there,” Minister of State for External Affairs General V.K. Singh told reporters here when asked whether Fr Tom Uzhunnalil, the Indian priest who was kidnapped by the Islamic State militants in March, was still alive.

“It is the same situation that we are facing for 40 people from Punjab. They are in the captivity of the IS in Iraq. We don’t have any confirmation. But we don’t have any adverse report,” Mr Singh said.

40 in captivity

“We just know a person has been abducted...or the 40 people are in captivity but anything adverse is not there. It is not coming out,” the Minister said, adding the government would not be able to say anything till the time any information reached it. The Indian nationals were taken hostage by the IS on June 11 in 2014 in northern Iraq’s Mosul town. Father Tom Uzhunnalil, who hails from Ramapuram in Kottayam, was abducted in March this year by the terror group in Yemen, a conflict zone. He had gone missing after the militant group attacked a care home run by Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity. Gunmen had stormed the refuge for the elderly and killed a Yemeni guard before tying up and shooting 15 other employees. — PTI

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