The taking into custody of 40 Indians, drawn into the crossfire of a
bitter power struggle in Iraq between an assertive but marginalised
Sunni minority and the government led by President Nouri al-Maliki, has
brought into focus the Narendra Modi government’s crisis management
skills. The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a jihadi
group, is apparently behind the detention and relocation of the workers,
who are from Punjab, into a cotton warehouse in the vicinity of Mosul —
Iraq’s second largest city that is an ethnically divided demographic
powder keg. Yet, there are indications that Sunni tribesmen, who may not
share the ISIS’s virulent extremist ideology but are in a tactical
embrace with it in order to counter the government of Mr. Nouri
al-Maliki, which has Shia overtones, are holding the victims. The
detentions, along with the entrapment of 46 nurses in a Tikrit hospital,
is cause for deep anxiety; the crisis has dwarfed the 2004 abduction
and release of three Indian truck drivers near Baghdad. Apart from
India, countries such as China and Turkey, whose nationals have been
detained in large numbers, are experiencing the pain. The blowback of
the incident has hit the government hard, persuading External Affairs
Minister Sushma Swaraj to meet the distraught families of the victims,
who have no option but to seek solace from the Central government.
end quote from:
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/india-faces-the-iraq-test/article6134195.ece
Something like this happened in Libya and other places since the 2004 Kidnapping in Baghdad of Indian nationals as well. With over 20,000 Indians living an working in Iraq as well as many Chinese and people from Turkey we have an International Crisis ongoing here for all countries with workers now in danger in Iraq. This is incredibly complicating the matter and could create unknown consequences both in Iraq and around the world as this craziness continues unabated.
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