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Bodies of 38 Indian workers killed by Daesh arrive home from Iraq

‘Indian officials for years insisted the abductees were alive’

By AFP - Apr 02,2018 - Last updated at Apr 02,2018

Indian Central Industrial Security Force personnel carry the coffin of Indian citizen Hemraj, who was killed in Iraq, at the International Airport in Amritsar on Monday (AFP photo)

AMRITSAR, India — The bodies of 38 Indian construction workers kidnapped and murdered in Iraq by the Daesh terrorist group returned home on Monday four years after their disappearance.

Grieving families — who were told for years by government officials that their loved ones were still alive — waited at an airport in the northwest state of Punjab to receive the coffins from Baghdad.

The victims were mostly from poor families in Punjab and were employed by a construction company in Mosul when they were abducted by extremists.

India’s foreign minister told parliament last month that 39 bodies were unearthed from a mass grave in Badush, a village northwest of Mosul.

DNA testing confirmed the identity of 38 of the corpses. One test was a partial match, with further examination needed, India’s junior foreign minister said on Monday.

The Indians were kidnapped in June 2014 as Daesh overran large swathes of territory in Iraq, including the major northern city of Mosul.

Indian officials for years insisted the abductees were alive until proven otherwise, drawing criticism from relatives who accused the government of keeping them in the dark.

Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj denied the government had given the families false hope. It is not known when the Indian construction workers were killed.

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