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Foreign hostages in Iraq

Members of the Iraqi insurgency began taking foreign hostages in Iraq beginning in April 2004. Since then, in a dramatic instance of Islamist kidnapping they have taken captive more than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis; among them, dozens of hostages were killed and others rescued or freed. In 2004, executions of captives were often filmed, and many were beheaded.[1] However, the number of the recorded killings decreased significantly. Many hostages remain missing with no clue as to their whereabouts. The United States Department of State Hostage Working Group was organized by the U.S. Embassy, Baghdad, in the summer of 2004 to monitor foreign hostages in Iraq.

The motives for these kidnappings include:

  • influencing foreign governments with troops in Iraq to withdraw
  • influencing foreign companies with workers in Iraq to leave the country
  • ransom money
  • Creating terror in Iraq
  • discouraging travel to Iraq
  • prisoner exchange

The following is a list of known civilian foreign hostages in Iraq.


Coalition Edit

Australia Edit

2 released/rescued Edit

  • John Martinkus, a journalist for SBS Television, was kidnapped on October 16, 2004. He was released on October 18, 2004, after his captors used Google to verify his status as a journalist.[2][3]
  • Douglas Wood, a construction engineer was kidnapped along with two Iraqi business associates on April 30, 2005. The two associates were later killed. Wood was rescued on June 15, 2005 in a raid carried out by the Iraqi Army.[4][5]

Bulgaria Edit

2 killed Edit

  • Georgi Lazov and Ivailo Kepov, two truck drivers, were seized on June 29, 2004, near Mosul. Lazov's beheaded body was found on July 14, 2004; Kepov's on July 22, 2004.[6]

Czech Republic Edit

3 released Edit

  • Reporter Michal Kubal and cameraman Petr Klíma, of Czech television and Vít Pohanka from Czech Radio were kidnapped on April 11, 2004. They were freed April 16, 2004.[7]

Denmark Edit

1 killed Edit

  • Henrik Frandsen was abducted on April 11, 2004, while working on a sewage project, and found dead the next day.[8]

Italy Edit

4 killed Edit

  • Fabrizio Quattrocchi, a security guard captured with three others, was reported killed in a video released on April 14, 2004.
  • Enzo Baldoni, a reporter taken hostage in August and shown being killed in a video released on August 26, 2004. His Iraqi driver-translator was killed during the abduction.
  • Salvatore Santoro, a photojournalist, reported kidnapped and killed on December 16, 2004.
  • Iyad Anwar Wali, an Italian-Iraqi businessman, was reported killed on October 2, 2004.

6 released Edit

  • Umberto Cupertino, Maurizio Agliana, and Salvatore Stefio were captured with security guard Fabrizio Quattrocchi on April 29, 2004. The three were freed on June 8, 2004.[9]
  • Simona Pari and Simona Torretta, aid workers for a Bridge to Baghdad, were kidnapped along with two Iraqis on September 7, 2004. They were freed on September 28, 2004. Italy allegedly paid $5 million in ransom for their release.[10]
  • Giuliana Sgrena, a reporter for Il Manifesto, was kidnapped on February 4, 2005. Her Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator managed to escape. When she was released on March 4, 2005, her car was shot at by US troops, and Italian agent Nicola Calipari was killed. Italy allegedly paid $6 million in ransom for her release.

Japan Edit

2 killed Edit

  • Shosei Koda, a tourist, was confirmed to beheaded on October 30, 2004. He had been kidnapped on October 26, 2004, by Zarqawi's group.
  • Akihiko Saito, a security contractor, was kidnapped after a convoy attack and reported killed on May 28, 2005.

3 released Edit

  • Soichiro Koriyama, Noriaki Imai, and Nahoko Takato, Japanese citizens were kidnapped on April 8, 2004, but released on April 15, 2004.[11]

Macedonia Edit

3 killed Edit

  • Dalibor Lazarevski, Dragan Marković, and Zoran Naskovski, were kidnapped on August 21, 2004, near Baghdad. They worked for Soufan Engineering, which caters to the needs of the US military and its private contractors. On October 22, 2004, the Macedonian government confirmed the three had been killed.[12]

2 released Edit

  • Faruk Ademi and Rasim Ramadani, two contractors working for a cleaning company at Basra International Airport were abducted on February 16, 2006. They were released on February 20, 2006.[13]

The Philippines Edit

2 released Edit

  • Angelo de la Cruz, a truck driver, was taken hostage on July 7, 2004. De la Cruz was released after the Philippines withdrew their 51 troops in the country on July 20, 2004. His Iraqi security guard was killed during the abduction.[14]
  • Roberto Tarongoy, kidnapped on November 1, 2004. He was released eight months later, on June 22, 2005 after a ransom was paid.[15]

Poland Edit

2 released Edit

  • Jerzy Kos, a contractor kidnapped on June 1, 2004, was freed in an operation on June 8, 2004.[9]
  • Teresa Borcz Khalifa, a Polish aid worker, was kidnapped on October 28, 2004. She was freed on November 20, 2004.

Romania Edit

3 released Edit

  • Marie Jeanne Ion, Sorin Dumitru Miscoci, and Ovidiu Ohanesian, journalists, were kidnapped on March 28, 2005 in Baghdad. Their Iraqi-American translator, Mohammad Munaf, also went missing with them. They were released on May 22, 2005. Munaf was accused by the Romanian government of organizing the kidnapping and was arrested.[7][16]

South Korea Edit

1 killed Edit

  • Kim Sun-il, a translator, was kidnapped on May 30, 2004 by Zarqawi's group. He was beheaded in a video released June 22, 2004.

Ukraine Edit

5 released Edit

  • Five energy workers from Interenergoservis were kidnapped on April 12, 2004, along with 3 Russians and a man immediately released, all were released the next day with the insurgents apologizing, noting that they did not realise they were Russian and Ukrainian.[17]

United Kingdom Edit

5 killed Edit

  • Kenneth John Bigley, a civil engineer, who was kidnapped September 16, 2004. The two Americans kidnapped with him were beheaded and Bigley was beheaded around October 7.
  • Jason Swindlehurst, Jason Creswell, Alec Maclachlan and Alan McMenemy, four security contractors, were kidnapped with Peter Moore, a computer consultant, on May 29, 2007. Their captors were Shia militiamen who demanded the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq and release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages' release. Creswell, McMenemy and Moore appeared in videos released in November 2007, February 2008 and July 2008. The captors claimed that Swindlehurst killed himself on May 25, 2008. However, that turned out to be a lie. The bodies of Swindlehurst and Creswell were recovered on June 19, 2009. On July 29, 2009, it was revealed that Maclachlan and McMenemy had also been killed. Maclachlan's body was recovered on September 1, 2009. McMenemy's body was recovered on January 20, 2012.[18][19][20][21]

6 released/rescued Edit

  • Gary Teeley, a laundry contractor at an American base outside Nasiriyah, was kidnapped on April 5, 2004. He was freed by his kidnappers on April 11, 2004.[22]
  • James Brandon, a freelance journalist for The Sunday Telegraph, was kidnapped after 30 masked gunmen stormed into his hotel in Basra on August 12, 2004. He was freed on August 13, 2004, by his captors.[7]
  • Phillip Sands, a freelancer reporter, was abducted on December 26, 2005, along with his Iraqi interpreter and Iraqi driver. His abductors were gunmen who planned on using him to get Britain to pull all troops out of Iraq and release all Iraqi prisoners. Phillip was filmed pleading for his life. However, the tape was never sent to Al Jazeera. On December 31, 2005, Phillip and his two colleagues were rescued by U.S. troops who revealed that no one knew they were missing.[7]
  • Norman Frank Kember, an aid worker for Christian Peacemaker Teams, was kidnapped along with two Canadians and an American on November 27, 2005. Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken.[1] He was released as the result of a Coalition operation on March 23, 2006. See 2005-2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis.
  • Richard Butler, a journalist working for CBS News, was kidnapped in Basra on February 10, 2008, with his Iraqi interpreter Aqeel Khadhir. The translator was freed on February 13, 2008. Butler was rescued on April 14, 2008 by Iraqi forces.[23][24]
  • Peter Moore, a computer consultant, and his four security guards were kidnapped from the Iraqi Finance Ministry on May 29, 2007.[25] Peter and two of his security guards appeared in videos released in November 2007, February 2008 and July 2008. Their captors were Shia militiamen who demanded the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages's release. Their captors claimed that Swindlehurst killed himself on May 25, 2008. However, that turned out to be a lie. The bodies of Swindlehurst and Creswell were recovered on June 19, 2009. Both of them had been shot dead. On July 29, 2009, it was revealed that Maclachlan and McMenemy were also killed. The body of Maclachlan was recovered on September 1, 2009. He was also shot dead. McMenemy's body was recovered on January 20, 2012.[26][19][20][21] Moore was released on December 30, 2009 in exchange for Qais Khazali.[27] In December 2009 evidence uncovered during an investigation by the Guardian newspaper and Guardian Films linked the Quds Force to the kidnappings of Moore, Swindlehurst, Maclachlan, Creswell and McMenemy.[25]

United States Edit

11 killed Edit

  • Nicholas Evan Berg, a 26-year-old freelancer, went missing on 9 April 2004. His widely publicized beheading was shown in a video on 11 May 2004. His body had been found the day before. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi personally beheaded Berg.[28]
  • Olin Eugene "Jack" Armstrong and Jack Hensley, two contractors for the construction firm Gulf Supplies Commercial Services of the United Arab Emirates,[29] were kidnapped along with a Briton named Kenneth John Bigley on September 16, 2004. Armstrong was beheaded[30] on 20 September 2004.[31] Abu Musab al-Zarqawi personally beheaded Armstrong.[32] The following day, the group beheaded Hensley, and threatened to kill Bigley, unless the United States met their demands to free all women prisoners in Iraqi jails.[29] Bigley himself was beheaded in October 2004.[30]
  • Ronald Alan Schulz, an electrician, was reported kidnapped on 6 December 2005. On 19 December 2005, the Islamic Army released a video showing Schulz's killing in which he is shot in the head after the U.S. refused to release all Iraqi prisoners. His remains were found in September 2008 and confirmed to be Schulz's the next month.[33]
  • Thomas William Fox, an aid worker working for Christian Peacemaker Teams, was reported kidnapped on November 27, 2005, along with two Canadians and a Briton. Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken.[1] His body was found in a rubbish heap on 10 March 2006 (see 2005–2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis).
  • John Roy Young, Joshua Mark Munns, Paul Christopher Reuben and Jonathon Michael Cote, four security contractors, were kidnapped with an Austrian named Bert Nussbaumer on November 16, 2006. They appeared in two hostage videos released in December 2006 and January 2007. The kidnapped contractors stated in their video that they would not be released until the following demands had been made; the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages's release. Four fingers were sent to U.S. authorities in February 2008. The fingers belonged to Munns, Reuben, Cote and Nussbaumer. The bodies of Young, Nussbaumer, Munns and Reuben were recovered in March 2008. Cote's body was recovered in April 2008.[34][35]
  • Ronald Withrow, a contractor, was kidnapped along with his translator and driver on 5 January 2007. The translator and driver were found dead the next day. One of Withrow's fingers was sent to U.S. authorities in February 2008. His body was recovered in March 2008.[36]
  • Steven Charles Vincent, a journalist, was kidnapped along with his Iraqi translator, Nouriya Itais Wadi, in Basra on 2 August 2005. They were bound, gagged, and taken to an undisclosed location where for five hours they were beaten and interrogated, then taken to the outskirts of town and shot. They were found by British and Iraqi policemen but Vincent was dead, shot in the back at close range. Wadi survived the attack, despite having been shot three times.[7]

6 released/escaped Edit

  • Jill Carroll, a freelance reporter for the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor, was kidnapped in West Baghdad on January 7, 2006, by unknown gunmen. Her Iraqi translator was killed during the abduction. Her Iraqi driver escaped. Her kidnappers demanded the release of all female Iraqi prisoners. She was shown in four videos during her captivity. She was released on March 30, 2006.
  • Micah Garen, a freelance reporter, was kidnapped along with his Iraqi translator, Amir Doushi, on August 13, 2004, near Nasiriyah. They were freed on August 22, 2004.[7]
  • Roy Hallums, an employee of a Saudi trading company, was seized along with Roberto Tarangoy, Inus Dewari and three Iraqi security guards on November 1, 2004, in Baghdad. The three Iraqi security guards were later released. Dewari was released on November 10, 2004. Hallums was shown in a video aired on January 25, 2005. Tarongoy was released on June 22, 2005. On September 7, 2005, Hallums was freed in an operation conducted by Delta Force.
  • Thomas Hamill, a truck driver, was seized in a deadly convoy attack on April 9, 2004 (see 2004 Iraq KBR Convoy Ambush). He was later shown in a video, but escaped on May 1, 2004.[37]
  • Issa T. Salomi, a civilian contractor, was kidnapped by a Shiite militia group on January 23, 2010, and shown in a video in February 2010. His kidnappers demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners, the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq, the prosecution of security contractors employed by Blackwater Worldwide and compensation to Iraqi families. He was released on March 25, 2010 in exchange for four Iraqi prisoners.[38][39][40]
  • Paul Taggart, a freelance photographer, was kidnapped on October 10, 2004. He was released on October 12, 2004.[7]

5 of unknown fate Edit

  • Kirk von Ackermann, contractor for a Turkish company, disappeared on October 9, 2003 after leaving a meeting at FOB Pacesetter. His vehicle was found abandoned later that same day.
  • Timothy Edward Bell, a contractor for Halliburton, went missing on April 9, 2004. He was never seen in a video and was declared dead in 2010.[41]
  • Aban Abdel Malek Mahmoud Elias, an Iraqi-American engineer from Denver, was shown being held hostage in a video on May 3, 2004. He has not been seen or heard from since.
  • Radim Sadeq Mohammed Sadeq, also called "Dean Sadek", a businessman kidnapped on November 2, 2004, in Baghdad. He was shown in a video that month and in another video dated Christmas Eve but released in late January. He has not been seen or heard from since. His kidnappers demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners.
  • Jeffrey Ake, a water bottling plant contractor, was kidnapped on April 11, 2005, and shown in a videotape two days later. He has not been seen or heard from since. His kidnappers demanded $2 million in exchange for his release. After three weeks of negotiations, the kidnappers cut off all communication. Ake is presumed dead and his family held a private funeral for him in the summer of 2014.[42][43][44]

Non-coalition Edit

Algeria Edit

2 killed Edit

  • Ali Belaroussi, Algerian Chargé d'affaires, and Azzedin Belkadi, Algerian diplomatic attache, were kidnapped along with their driver on July 21, 2005 in Baghdad.[45] The Algerian government, on July 27, 2005, said the diplomats had been killed.[46][47]

Austria Edit

1 killed Edit

  • Bert Nussbaumer, a contractor, was kidnapped along with four Americans on November 16, 2006. They appeared in two hostage videos released in December 2006 and January 2007. Their kidnappers demanded the withdrawal of America troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages' release. One of Nussbaumer's fingers was sent to U.S. authorities in February 2008. Three of the Americans and Nussbaumer were found dead in March 2008. The other American was found dead in April 2008.[34]

Bangladesh Edit

1 released Edit

  • Abul Kashem, a truck driver, was kidnapped on October 28, 2004, as he ferried supplies to Kuwait. He was freed on December 10, 2004.[48]

Brazil Edit

1 killed Edit

  • João José Vasconcelos, an engineer, was kidnapped on January 19, 2005, in an ambush on the Baghdad Airport road. His body was found more than two years after his kidnapping. It is believed that he died from injuries sustained in the abduction shortly after arriving at the house where his captors planned to hold him.[49]

Canada Edit

1 killed Edit

  • Zaid Meerwali, who held dual Canadian-Iraqi citizenship, was seized August 2, 2005, and $250,000 in ransom was demanded. Officials in Canada said, that on August 15, 2005, he had been shot in the head while the family was preparing the ransom money.[50]

6 released/escaped Edit

  • Fadi Ihsan Fadel, a Syrian-Canadian employed by the International Rescue Committee, was taken hostage in Najaf on April 8, 2004 but released on April 16, 2004.
  • Naji al-Kuwaiti, was taken hostage on April 28, 2004, and released on May 4, 2004.
  • Scott Taylor, was a journalist abducted by Ansar al-Islam in Tal Afar on September 9, 2004. He was released five days later.
  • James Loney and Harmeet Singh Sooden, human rights workers with Christian Peacemaker Teams, were kidnapped in Baghdad on November 27, 2005, along with an American and Briton. Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken.[1] They were released as the result of a coalition military operation on March 23, 2006. See 2005-2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis.
  • Fairuz Yamulky was abducted on September 6, 2004. Her driver and another employee were not taken. Yamulky managed to escape with the help of one of her captors sixteen days later.[51]

1 of unknown fate Edit

  • Rifat Mohammed Rifat, an Iraqi-born prison worker, was taken hostage on April 8, 2004. He is still missing.

The People's Republic of China Edit

15 released Edit

  • Seven workers - Xue Yougui, Lin Jinping, Li Guiwu, Li Guiping, Wei Weilong, Chen Xiaojin, and Lin Kongming - were abducted on April 11, 2004 near Fallujah, but were released on April 13, 2004.[52]
  • Eight unemployed construction workers were kidnapped by a group calling itself "The Islamic Resistance, al-Numan Brigades" on January 18, 2005, as they tried to leave the country. They were released four days later. The group included three teenagers.[53][54]

Cyprus Edit

1 released Edit

  • Garabet Jean Jekerjian, a man with dual Lebanese-Cypriot citizenship, was abducted in August 2005. He was released on December 31, 2005 in exchange for $200,000 ransom.[55][56]

Egypt Edit

5 killed Edit

  • Mohammed Mutawalli, a purported "Egypt spy", was beheaded in a video on August 10, 2004.[57]
  • Nasser Juma, contractor, kidnapped on August 27, 2004, his body was found in the town of Baiji, Iraq on 5 September 2004.[58]
  • Ibrahim Mohammed Ismail, 39, driver, 16 January 2005.[59][60]
  • Ihab al-Sherif, Egyptian envoy to Iraq, kidnapped in Baghdad on July 3, 2005, and reported killed on July 7, 2005.[61]
  • Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Hilali, translator, abducted 9 December 2005.[62]

16 released Edit

  • Victor Tawfiq Gerges, truck driver, was kidnapped with Turk Bulent Yanik on 1 June 2004. He was released on 18 June 2004.[63]
  • Alsayeid Mohammed Alsayeid Algarabawi, truck driver, was kidnapped on 6 July 2004. He was released on 19 July 2004.[64][65][66]
  • Mohammed Ali Sanad, truck driver, was seized with three Indians and three Kenyans on 22 July 2004. He was released on 1 September 2004.[67][68]
  • Mohamed Mamdouh Qutb, diplomat, was seized in Baghdad on 23 July 2004. He was released on 26 July 2004.[69][70]
  • Six employees for Iraqna, the local brand name for Egyptian telecoms giant Orascom, were kidnapped on 24 September 2004, with the first two being released on 28 September 2004.[71]
  • Four engineers, Mohammed al-Saadi, Hussein Ashour, Waleed Ismail and Sayed Shaaban working for Egyptian telecoms giant Orascom were kidnapped in Baghdad on 6 February 2005. They were freed the next day by US forces.[72]
  • Nabil Tawfiq Sulieman and Matwali Mohammed Salim, engineers for the firm Unitrak, were abducted on a road west of Baghdad, a video on an Islamic website said on 19 March 2005. They were released a day later.[73]

1 of unknown fate Edit

  • Samuel Edward, an engineer working for Iraqna Mobile Company, was kidnapped on September 26, 2005, in Baghdad. His Iraqi driver was left unharmed.[74]

France Edit

4 released Edit

  • Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot, two reporters, were kidnapped along with their Syrian driver on August 21, 2004. The driver was rescued on November 12. The two journalists were released on December 21. France allegedly paid $15 million in ransom for their release.
  • Florence Aubenas, a reporter for the daily Libération. She disappeared January 5, 2005 but was released with her Iraqi translator, Hussein Hanoun al-Saadi, on June 11. France allegedly paid $10 million in ransom for their release.
  • Bernard Planche, a water engineer, was kidnapped in Mansour on December 5, 2005. He was freed on January 7, 2006, when his captors fled the house where they were holding him during a military operation.[75]

Germany Edit

5 released Edit

  • Susanne Osthoff, an archaeologist, was kidnapped along with her Iraqi driver on November 25, 2005, according to the German Foreign Ministry. They were released on December 18, 2005, after Germany allegedly paid the kidnappers $5 million ransom. It is also speculated that Germany released Mohammed Ali Hammadi in exchange for Osthoff's release.
  • Thomas Nitzschke and Rene Braeunlich, two engineers, were kidnapped by gunmen near Baiji on January 24, 2006. They appeared in four videos and their kidnappers demanded that Germany end its cooperation with the Iraqi regime, close its mission in Baghdad, ensure that all German businesses cease dealings there, and the release of all Iraqi prisoners held by US forces. On May 2, 2006, the German government announced the two had been freed. Germany allegedly paid $5 million ransom for their release.[76]
  • Hannelore Marianne Krause, worked for the Austrian embassy in Baghdad, was kidnapped on February 6, 2007, with her son Sinan in Baghdad. Their kidnappers demanded that Germany withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. She was shown in three videos during her captivity. Hannelore was released on July 11, 2007. Her son's fate is unknown.[77]
  • Hella Mewis, an arts curator, was kidnapped by armed militants in Baghdad on July 20, 2020.[78] She was freed by Iraq military on July 24, 2020.[79]

1 of unknown fate Edit

  • Sinan Krause, a technician at the Iraqi Foreign Ministry, was kidnapped on February 6, 2007, along with his mother Hannelore, in Baghdad. Their kidnappers demanded that Germany withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. Hannelore was released on July 10, 2007, but Sinan hasn't been seen or heard from since a video was released on September 11, 2007. The video was recorded before Hannelore was released. It showed Sinan saying goodbye to his mother. Their kidnappers issued a final 10-day deadline in the video for Germany to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan. They threatened to kill Sinan if their demand was not met. On April 24, 2008, his father appealed to the captors to release his son. The kidnappers ignored the plea and Sinan's fate is unknown.[80]

India Edit

49 released Edit

  • July 22, 2004: Antaryami, Sukhdev Singh, and Tilak Raj – Kuwait and Gulf Link (KGL, a Kuwaiti transport company working for the US military) truck drivers were seized in Fallujah during the Iraq War by a little known militant group calling itself the "Islamic Secret Army", other abductees included an Egyptian and three Kenyans. They were released September 1, 2004 after KGL paid about half a million US dollars in ransom; the negotiators from the Indian side included ambassador to Iraq B. B. Tyagi, ambassador to Oman Talmiz Ahmad, ambassador to Kuwait Swashpawan Singh, diplomat Zikrur Rahman and E. Ahamed the Minister of State for External Affairs.[81][82][83] Indian journalist V. Sudarshan's Anatomy of an Abduction: How the Indian Hostages in Iraq were Freed (2008) provides a detailed report of the kidnapping.[84]
  • 46 Indian nurses were taken hostage on June 29, 2014 by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) from the Tikrit Teaching Hospital in Tikrit in central Iraq, when it fell to the jihadist group during the First Battle of Tikrit.[85][86]
Most of the nurses had recently immigrated to Iraq in search for better employment opportunities despite the ongoing war. The city of Tikrit had fallen under siege by ISIS, weeks prior to formal hostilities, in early June and the hospital had run out of food supplies which were later provided by an official of the Ministry of Health (Iraq). The official and two Iraqi soldiers who were guarding the hospital left days prior to the takeover by ISIS on June 29, as had the local Iraqi nurses weeks ago.[86] ISIS first moved the nurses to the hospital's basement and initially refused to hand them over. After negotiations by the Embassy of India in Baghdad, lead by ambassador Ajay Kumar Amban and former ambassador B. B. Tyagi, the group agreed to release the hostages in Mosul. They were shifted to Mosul by ISIS and handed over to Indian officials on July 4, 2014, the officials took them to Erbil and they were flown out to India from the Erbil International Airport.[85][86] The majority of the nurses were from the state of Kerala and chief minister Oommen Chandy kept in touch with the hostages throughout the ordeal.[86] The nurses later stated they were treated well by ISIS militants, some of whom they had treated during the initial takeover of the Tikrit hospital.[87][86]
Two 2017 Indian films are based on the incident, Take Off (2017)[88][89] and Tiger Zinda Hai (2017).[85]

39 killed, 1 escaped Edit

On 20 March 2018, Swaraj declared in the parliament that 39 missing Indian workers had been killed, "I have concrete proof that 39 Indians have been killed. We wanted to give the families closure". The physical remains of the dead were repatriated by the government in a special aircraft.[90]

Indonesia Edit

4 released Edit

  • Istiqomah binti Misnad and Casingkem binti Aspin, two female workers of an electricity firm were kidnapped along with six Iraqis and two Lebanese in late September 2004. They appeared in a video broadcast on Al Jazeera on September 30, 2004. The Islamic Army demanded that Indonesia free Abu Bakar Bashir in exchange for the release of the two women. Bashir refused to be released for the two Indonesian women and Indonesia also said it would not free him. The Islamic Army also demanded that the Lebanese government withdraw all nationals working in Iraq for the release of the two Lebanese men. The women were released on October 4, 2004. The six Iraqis were freed later that month and the two Lebanese were freed for ransom in November, 2004.[91]
  • Meutya Hafid, a reporter, and Budiyanto, a cameraman, were kidnapped along with their Jordanian driver on February 15, 2005. They were freed on February 21, 2005.[92]

Iran Edit

7 released Edit

  • Fereidoun Jahani, an Iranian diplomat, was kidnapped near Karbala on August 4, 2004. He was released on September 27, 2004.[93]
  • Six Iranian pilgrims and their Iraqi guide were kidnapped on November 28, 2005. Their Iraqi driver was wounded but was not abducted. The Iraqi guide and two of the Iranian pilgrims (both women) were released a day later. The four male hostages were released on February 10, 2006.[94]

Ireland Edit

1 killed Edit

  • Margaret Hassan, the director of CARE International -- who held British, Iraqi and Irish citizenship -- was kidnapped in Baghdad on October 19, 2004. Her Iraqi driver and Iraqi unarmed security guard were not taken. She was killed in a video released on November 16, 2004.[citation needed]

1 released Edit

  • Rory Carroll, a journalist for the British newspaper The Guardian, was abducted on October 19, 2005, in Baghdad and released the next day.

Israel Edit

1 held Edit

  • Elizabeth Tsurkov, a researcher, was kidnapped on March 26, 2023.[95]

1 released Edit

  • Nabil Razouk, an Israeli Arab from East Jerusalem working for the US company Research Triangle International, was kidnapped on April 8, 2004. He was freed on April 22, 2004, after pleas from his family and Palestinians.[96]

Jordan Edit

2 released Edit

  • Ibrahim al-Maharmeh, a businessman, was kidnapped in Baghdad on March 5, 2005. He was released on March 8, 2005, after a ransom was paid.[97]
  • Mahmoud Suleiman Saidat, a driver for the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad, was kidnapped on December 20, 2006. He was later shown on a videotape calling for the release of failed suicide bomber Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi. He was released on February 21, 2007.[98]

6 of unknown fate Edit

  • Six Jordanians were kidnapped in May 2005. They appeared in a video that aired on Al-Jazeera on May 6, 2005. They haven't been seen or heard from since.[99]

Kenya Edit

3 released Edit

  • Faiz Khamis Salim, Jalal Mohamed Awadh and Ibrahim Khamis Idd were kidnapped on July 22, 2004, with three Indians and an Egyptian. They were freed September 1, 2004.[81]

2 of unknown fate Edit

  • Moses Munyao and George Noballa, engineers from the Iraqna telephone company, were reported kidnapped after an ambush on January 18, 2006. They were never found.[100]

Lebanon Edit

3 released Edit

  • Mohammed Hamad, was kidnapped when he was seven years old on October 22, 2004, after being lured into a car by his captors while he was walking home from school. His captors told him his father was hurt in a car accident. They also told his father that they would behead his son unless they were paid $150,000. They eventually lowered their demand to $70,000 and then lowered it again to $1,725. The $1,725 ransom was paid and Mohammed was released on October 29, 2004.[101][102]
  • Marwan Ibrahim al-Qassar and Mohammed Jawdat Hussein were kidnapped by the Islamic Army in Iraq in late on in September 2004 along with six Iraqis and two Indonesian women. They appeared in a video broadcast on Al-Jazeera on September 30, 2004. The Islamic Army demanded that Indonesia free Abu Bakar Bashir in exchange for the release of the two women. Bashir refused to be released for the two Indonesian women and Indonesia also said it would not free him. The Islamic Army also demanded that the Lebanese government withdraw all nationals working in Iraq for the release of the two Lebanese men. The Iraqis and the two Indonesian women were freed in October 2004. Marwan and Mohammed were freed in exchange for a ransom in November 2004.[103][104]

Morocco Edit

2 killed Edit

  • Driver Abderrahim Boualam and assistant Abdelkrim El Mouhafidim, both workers at the Moroccan embassy in Baghdad, went missing on October 20, 2005 while driving back from Jordan. On October 25, 2005, militants claimed their kidnapping. On November 3, 2005, Al Qaeda in Iraq said in an internet statement that it had decided to kill the two hostages. Ziad Khalaf Raja al-Karbouly later confessed to having arranged the kidnappings. He stated that two Kurds were kidnapped with the Moroccans and were later released.[105]

Nepal Edit

12 killed Edit

  • Gyanendra Shrestha, Manoj Kumar Thakur, Rajendra Kumar Shrestha, Jit Bahadur Thapa, Budha Kumar Shas, Ramesh Khadka, Mangal Bahadur Limbu, Sanjaya Kumar Thakur, Lalan Sing Koirala, Chhok Bahadur Thapa, Prakash Adhikari, and Bishnu Hari Thapa, were twelve Nepalese taken hostage on August 23, 2004. A video from August 31, 2004, showed the beheading of one and the shooting in the head of the eleven others.[106]

1 released Edit

  • Inus Dewari was kidnapped November 1, 2004, in Baghdad. He was released on November 6, 2004.

Palestine Edit

1 of unknown fate Edit

  • Rami Daas, a 26-year-old Palestinian student, was reported by his family as having been kidnapped on May 9, 2005, by gunmen in the northern city of Mosul. His fate is unknown.[107]

Pakistan Edit

2 killed Edit

  • Azad Hussein Khan, an engineer and Sajjad Naeem, a driver, were kidnapped on July 23, 2004, and killed. Their captors demanded their Kuwaiti company leave Iraq. In a video released on July 29, 2004, their bodies were shown. An Iraqi driver who was held with them was released.[108][109]

13 released Edit

  • Amjad Hafeez, a driver, was kidnapped on June 25, 2004. He was freed on July 2, 2004.
  • An embassy worker was abducted on April 25, 2005, but released two weeks later.
  • Eleven construction workers were kidnapped from their bus near Nasiriyah on August 13, 2005. They were released August 22, 2005.

Russia Edit

4 killed Edit

  • Fyodor Zaitsev, third secretary of the Russian Embassy in Iraq, and embassy employees Rinat Agliulin, Anatoly Smirnov and Oleg Fyodoseyev were abducted after an ambush in Baghdad on June 3, 2006. Another employee, Vitaly Titov, was shot and killed. A group claimed to have executed them on June 21, 2006, and a video released on June 25, 2006, confirmed their deaths. The kidnapper group gave 48 hours to the Putin administration to pull out his troops from Chechnya. The bodies of the four diplomats were found in 2012.[110][111]

5 released Edit

  • Three energy workers, working for the Interenergoservis, were kidnapped April 12, 2004, along with five Ukrainians and a man immediately released, all were released the next day with the insurgents apologizing, noting that they did not realise they were Russian and Ukrainian.[17]
  • Andrei Meshcheryakov and Aleksandr Gordiyenko, employees of Interenergoservis, were kidnapped on May 10, 2004, but released on May 17, 2004.

Somalia Edit

1 released Edit

  • Ali Ahmed Mousa, a truck driver, was taken hostage on July 29, 2004, in order to convince his Kuwaiti employer to withdraw from Iraq. He was released several days later.

South Africa Edit

4 of unknown fate Edit

  • Johann Enslin (48), Andre Durant (38), Hardus Greeff (43) and Callie Scheepers (48), contractors, the so-called Baghdad Four, were abducted at a false roadblock in Baghdad by unidentified men on December 10, 2006, along with five Iraqis. The Iraqis were released two days later. Ten days after the abduction, Andre spoke to his wife briefly in a "proof of life" phone call. There were some talks that these four were still alive in May 2010, but since then there has been no word on their fate and their families later had them declared legally dead.[112][113]

Sri Lanka Edit

1 released Edit

  • Dinesh Dharmendran Rajaratnam, a truck driver, was kidnapped on October 28, 2004, while ferrying supplies to Kuwait. He was released on December 10, 2004.[48]

Sudan Edit

6 killed Edit

  • Six Sudanese truck drivers were kidnapped by Ansar al-Sunnah in April 2005. The six men were shot dead in a video posted on the Internet.[114]

9 released Edit

  • Noureddin Zakaria, a translator, was kidnapped on October 30, 2004, in Ramadi. He was released on November 6, 2004.[115]
  • Six Sudanese, including the second secretary at the Sudanese embassy, were abducted in Baghdad on December 23, 2005. They were released on December 31, 2005, after Sudan closed its embassy in Baghdad.[116]
  • Mohammed Haroun Hamad, a truck driver, was kidnapped along with his colleague Maher Ataya sometime in March 2005. The Islamic Army claimed responsibility in a statement and internet video for the abductions on March 9. The group claimed that a Sharia Council would decide their fates. On April 6, 2005, a second video announced that the Sharia Council decided to release Mohammed and Maher.[117]

Sweden Edit

1 released Edit

  • Ulf Hjertström, an oil broker, was taken hostage on March 25, 2005. He was released on May 30, 2005.[118]

Switzerland Edit

2 released Edit

  • Two Swiss nationals, a married couple who worked for a NGO, were kidnapped on April 20, 2004, by an unknown group. They were held hostage for 48 hours and released on April 22, 2004, after relatives of the kidnappers from the Obaida tribe promised to pressure Yemeni authorities. Some reports listed the couple as tourists.[119]

Syria Edit

1 released Edit

  • Mohammed al-Joundi, the driver for Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot, was kidnapped on August 21, 2004. He was freed by US troops in Fallujah on November 12, 2004.

Turkey Edit

4 killed Edit

  • Durmus Kumdereli, a truck driver, was kidnapped on August 14, 2004. He was having dinner in a restaurant a few miles away from Mosul. He was kidnapped in that restaurant with Mustafa Köksal by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's men. Kumdereli was decapitated on August 17, 2004 by Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad. Koksal was freed on August 18, 2004.
  • Dursun Ali Yildirim Tek, a truck driver, was kidnapped on July 23, 2006. Two videos were broadcast on the internet in which his captors demanded the Turkish government end all cooperation with Iraq and that they shut down the company Tek worked for. In the second video, a 72-hour deadline was issued in which Turkey had to give in to the captors' demands or Tek would be executed. He was killed in October after the deadline passed and his body was found near Baghdad's Airport. His body was identified a month and a half later.[120]
  • Murat Yuce, a truck driver, was kidnapped in Iraq along with his colleague Aytullah Gezmen in late July 2004. A video showing Abu Ayyub al-Masri shooting Yuce in the head was posted on a web site on August 2, 2004. Aytullah was released a month later.[121]
  • Maher Kemal, a contractor, was reported beheaded on October 11, 2004.[122]

6 released Edit

  • Bulent Yanik, a truck driver, was kidnapped on June 1, 2004 and released on June 18.[123]
  • Abdulkadir Tanrikulu, a businessman, abducted by gunmen from the Bakhan Hotel in Baghdad on January 13, 2005. He was freed on June 29, 2005.[124]
  • Ali Musluoglu, a businessman, was kidnapped in Baghdad on May 19, 2005. He was released on September 20, 2005 in exchange for a $250,000 ransom.[125]
  • Aytullah Gezmen, a truck driver, was kidnapped on July 31, 2004, along with his colleague Murat Yuce. Murat was executed on August 16, 2004. Aytullah was released a month later after he "repented" working for the Americans.[121]
  • Mustafa Köksal, a truck driver, was kidnapped on August 14, 2004, along with his colleague Durmus Kumdereli. Kumdereli was beheaded on August 17, 2004. Köksal was freed on August 18, 2004.
  • Hasan Eskimutlu, a technician, was kidnapped on June 14, 2006, along with his Iraqi translator. His captors sent a video to Aljazeera in which they demanded the Turkish government withdraw its ambassador from Baghdad and that they put pressure on the Iraqi government to free male and female prisoners from U.S and Iraqi prisons. They were freed on August 2, 2006.[126]

United Arab Emirates Edit

1 released Edit

  • Naji Rashid al-Nuaimi, the first secretary of the UAE's embassy in Baghdad, was abducted by gunmen on May 16, 2006. His captors demanded that the UAE abandon its presence in Iraq. Nuaimi was freed on May 30, 2006. His Sudanese driver was wounded and later died of his injuries.[127]

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • Usher, Sebastian. "Arabs ambivalent over hostage crisis." BBC. Thursday 23 September 2011.

foreign, hostages, iraq, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be confusing or unclear to readers Please help clarify the article There might be a discussion about this on the talk page June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this article if appropriate Editing help is available June 2017 This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information June 2017 This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Members of the Iraqi insurgency began taking foreign hostages in Iraq beginning in April 2004 Since then in a dramatic instance of Islamist kidnapping they have taken captive more than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis among them dozens of hostages were killed and others rescued or freed In 2004 executions of captives were often filmed and many were beheaded 1 However the number of the recorded killings decreased significantly Many hostages remain missing with no clue as to their whereabouts The United States Department of State Hostage Working Group was organized by the U S Embassy Baghdad in the summer of 2004 to monitor foreign hostages in Iraq The motives for these kidnappings include influencing foreign governments with troops in Iraq to withdraw influencing foreign companies with workers in Iraq to leave the country ransom money Creating terror in Iraq discouraging travel to Iraq prisoner exchangeThe following is a list of known civilian foreign hostages in Iraq Contents 1 Coalition 1 1 Australia 1 1 1 2 released rescued 1 2 Bulgaria 1 2 1 2 killed 1 3 Czech Republic 1 3 1 3 released 1 4 Denmark 1 4 1 1 killed 1 5 Italy 1 5 1 4 killed 1 5 2 6 released 1 6 Japan 1 6 1 2 killed 1 6 2 3 released 1 7 Macedonia 1 7 1 3 killed 1 7 2 2 released 1 8 The Philippines 1 8 1 2 released 1 9 Poland 1 9 1 2 released 1 10 Romania 1 10 1 3 released 1 11 South Korea 1 11 1 1 killed 1 12 Ukraine 1 12 1 5 released 1 13 United Kingdom 1 13 1 5 killed 1 13 2 6 released rescued 1 14 United States 1 14 1 11 killed 1 14 2 6 released escaped 1 14 3 5 of unknown fate 2 Non coalition 2 1 Algeria 2 1 1 2 killed 2 2 Austria 2 2 1 1 killed 2 3 Bangladesh 2 3 1 1 released 2 4 Brazil 2 4 1 1 killed 2 5 Canada 2 5 1 1 killed 2 5 2 6 released escaped 2 5 3 1 of unknown fate 2 6 The People s Republic of China 2 6 1 15 released 2 7 Cyprus 2 7 1 1 released 2 8 Egypt 2 8 1 5 killed 2 8 2 16 released 2 8 3 1 of unknown fate 2 9 France 2 9 1 4 released 2 10 Germany 2 10 1 5 released 2 10 2 1 of unknown fate 2 11 India 2 11 1 49 released 2 11 2 39 killed 1 escaped 2 12 Indonesia 2 12 1 4 released 2 13 Iran 2 13 1 7 released 2 14 Ireland 2 14 1 1 killed 2 14 2 1 released 2 15 Israel 2 15 1 1 held 2 15 2 1 released 2 16 Jordan 2 16 1 2 released 2 16 2 6 of unknown fate 2 17 Kenya 2 17 1 3 released 2 17 2 2 of unknown fate 2 18 Lebanon 2 18 1 3 released 2 19 Morocco 2 19 1 2 killed 2 20 Nepal 2 20 1 12 killed 2 20 2 1 released 2 21 Palestine 2 21 1 1 of unknown fate 2 22 Pakistan 2 22 1 2 killed 2 22 2 13 released 2 23 Russia 2 23 1 4 killed 2 23 2 5 released 2 24 Somalia 2 24 1 1 released 2 25 South Africa 2 25 1 4 of unknown fate 2 26 Sri Lanka 2 26 1 1 released 2 27 Sudan 2 27 1 6 killed 2 27 2 9 released 2 28 Sweden 2 28 1 1 released 2 29 Switzerland 2 29 1 2 released 2 30 Syria 2 30 1 1 released 2 31 Turkey 2 31 1 4 killed 2 31 2 6 released 2 32 United Arab Emirates 2 32 1 1 released 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksCoalition EditAustralia Edit 2 released rescued Edit John Martinkus a journalist for SBS Television was kidnapped on October 16 2004 He was released on October 18 2004 after his captors used Google to verify his status as a journalist 2 3 Douglas Wood a construction engineer was kidnapped along with two Iraqi business associates on April 30 2005 The two associates were later killed Wood was rescued on June 15 2005 in a raid carried out by the Iraqi Army 4 5 Bulgaria Edit 2 killed Edit Georgi Lazov and Ivailo Kepov two truck drivers were seized on June 29 2004 near Mosul Lazov s beheaded body was found on July 14 2004 Kepov s on July 22 2004 6 Czech Republic Edit 3 released Edit Reporter Michal Kubal and cameraman Petr Klima of Czech television and Vit Pohanka from Czech Radio were kidnapped on April 11 2004 They were freed April 16 2004 7 Denmark Edit 1 killed Edit Henrik Frandsen was abducted on April 11 2004 while working on a sewage project and found dead the next day 8 Italy Edit 4 killed Edit Fabrizio Quattrocchi a security guard captured with three others was reported killed in a video released on April 14 2004 Enzo Baldoni a reporter taken hostage in August and shown being killed in a video released on August 26 2004 His Iraqi driver translator was killed during the abduction Salvatore Santoro a photojournalist reported kidnapped and killed on December 16 2004 Iyad Anwar Wali an Italian Iraqi businessman was reported killed on October 2 2004 6 released Edit Umberto Cupertino Maurizio Agliana and Salvatore Stefio were captured with security guard Fabrizio Quattrocchi on April 29 2004 The three were freed on June 8 2004 9 Simona Pari and Simona Torretta aid workers for a Bridge to Baghdad were kidnapped along with two Iraqis on September 7 2004 They were freed on September 28 2004 Italy allegedly paid 5 million in ransom for their release 10 Giuliana Sgrena a reporter for Il Manifesto was kidnapped on February 4 2005 Her Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator managed to escape When she was released on March 4 2005 her car was shot at by US troops and Italian agent Nicola Calipari was killed Italy allegedly paid 6 million in ransom for her release Japan Edit 2 killed Edit Shosei Koda a tourist was confirmed to beheaded on October 30 2004 He had been kidnapped on October 26 2004 by Zarqawi s group Akihiko Saito a security contractor was kidnapped after a convoy attack and reported killed on May 28 2005 3 released Edit Soichiro Koriyama Noriaki Imai and Nahoko Takato Japanese citizens were kidnapped on April 8 2004 but released on April 15 2004 11 Macedonia Edit 3 killed Edit Dalibor Lazarevski Dragan Markovic and Zoran Naskovski were kidnapped on August 21 2004 near Baghdad They worked for Soufan Engineering which caters to the needs of the US military and its private contractors On October 22 2004 the Macedonian government confirmed the three had been killed 12 2 released Edit Faruk Ademi and Rasim Ramadani two contractors working for a cleaning company at Basra International Airport were abducted on February 16 2006 They were released on February 20 2006 13 The Philippines Edit 2 released Edit Angelo de la Cruz a truck driver was taken hostage on July 7 2004 De la Cruz was released after the Philippines withdrew their 51 troops in the country on July 20 2004 His Iraqi security guard was killed during the abduction 14 Roberto Tarongoy kidnapped on November 1 2004 He was released eight months later on June 22 2005 after a ransom was paid 15 Poland Edit 2 released Edit Jerzy Kos a contractor kidnapped on June 1 2004 was freed in an operation on June 8 2004 9 Teresa Borcz Khalifa a Polish aid worker was kidnapped on October 28 2004 She was freed on November 20 2004 Romania Edit 3 released Edit Marie Jeanne Ion Sorin Dumitru Miscoci and Ovidiu Ohanesian journalists were kidnapped on March 28 2005 in Baghdad Their Iraqi American translator Mohammad Munaf also went missing with them They were released on May 22 2005 Munaf was accused by the Romanian government of organizing the kidnapping and was arrested 7 16 South Korea Edit 1 killed Edit Kim Sun il a translator was kidnapped on May 30 2004 by Zarqawi s group He was beheaded in a video released June 22 2004 Ukraine Edit 5 released Edit Five energy workers from Interenergoservis were kidnapped on April 12 2004 along with 3 Russians and a man immediately released all were released the next day with the insurgents apologizing noting that they did not realise they were Russian and Ukrainian 17 United Kingdom Edit 5 killed Edit Kenneth John Bigley a civil engineer who was kidnapped September 16 2004 The two Americans kidnapped with him were beheaded and Bigley was beheaded around October 7 Jason Swindlehurst Jason Creswell Alec Maclachlan and Alan McMenemy four security contractors were kidnapped with Peter Moore a computer consultant on May 29 2007 Their captors were Shia militiamen who demanded the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq and release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages release Creswell McMenemy and Moore appeared in videos released in November 2007 February 2008 and July 2008 The captors claimed that Swindlehurst killed himself on May 25 2008 However that turned out to be a lie The bodies of Swindlehurst and Creswell were recovered on June 19 2009 On July 29 2009 it was revealed that Maclachlan and McMenemy had also been killed Maclachlan s body was recovered on September 1 2009 McMenemy s body was recovered on January 20 2012 18 19 20 21 6 released rescued Edit Gary Teeley a laundry contractor at an American base outside Nasiriyah was kidnapped on April 5 2004 He was freed by his kidnappers on April 11 2004 22 James Brandon a freelance journalist for The Sunday Telegraph was kidnapped after 30 masked gunmen stormed into his hotel in Basra on August 12 2004 He was freed on August 13 2004 by his captors 7 Phillip Sands a freelancer reporter was abducted on December 26 2005 along with his Iraqi interpreter and Iraqi driver His abductors were gunmen who planned on using him to get Britain to pull all troops out of Iraq and release all Iraqi prisoners Phillip was filmed pleading for his life However the tape was never sent to Al Jazeera On December 31 2005 Phillip and his two colleagues were rescued by U S troops who revealed that no one knew they were missing 7 Norman Frank Kember an aid worker for Christian Peacemaker Teams was kidnapped along with two Canadians and an American on November 27 2005 Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken 1 He was released as the result of a Coalition operation on March 23 2006 See 2005 2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis Richard Butler a journalist working for CBS News was kidnapped in Basra on February 10 2008 with his Iraqi interpreter Aqeel Khadhir The translator was freed on February 13 2008 Butler was rescued on April 14 2008 by Iraqi forces 23 24 Peter Moore a computer consultant and his four security guards were kidnapped from the Iraqi Finance Ministry on May 29 2007 25 Peter and two of his security guards appeared in videos released in November 2007 February 2008 and July 2008 Their captors were Shia militiamen who demanded the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages s release Their captors claimed that Swindlehurst killed himself on May 25 2008 However that turned out to be a lie The bodies of Swindlehurst and Creswell were recovered on June 19 2009 Both of them had been shot dead On July 29 2009 it was revealed that Maclachlan and McMenemy were also killed The body of Maclachlan was recovered on September 1 2009 He was also shot dead McMenemy s body was recovered on January 20 2012 26 19 20 21 Moore was released on December 30 2009 in exchange for Qais Khazali 27 In December 2009 evidence uncovered during an investigation by the Guardian newspaper and Guardian Films linked the Quds Force to the kidnappings of Moore Swindlehurst Maclachlan Creswell and McMenemy 25 United States Edit 11 killed Edit Nicholas Evan Berg a 26 year old freelancer went missing on 9 April 2004 His widely publicized beheading was shown in a video on 11 May 2004 His body had been found the day before Abu Musab al Zarqawi personally beheaded Berg 28 Olin Eugene Jack Armstrong and Jack Hensley two contractors for the construction firm Gulf Supplies Commercial Services of the United Arab Emirates 29 were kidnapped along with a Briton named Kenneth John Bigley on September 16 2004 Armstrong was beheaded 30 on 20 September 2004 31 Abu Musab al Zarqawi personally beheaded Armstrong 32 The following day the group beheaded Hensley and threatened to kill Bigley unless the United States met their demands to free all women prisoners in Iraqi jails 29 Bigley himself was beheaded in October 2004 30 Ronald Alan Schulz an electrician was reported kidnapped on 6 December 2005 On 19 December 2005 the Islamic Army released a video showing Schulz s killing in which he is shot in the head after the U S refused to release all Iraqi prisoners His remains were found in September 2008 and confirmed to be Schulz s the next month 33 Thomas William Fox an aid worker working for Christian Peacemaker Teams was reported kidnapped on November 27 2005 along with two Canadians and a Briton Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken 1 His body was found in a rubbish heap on 10 March 2006 see 2005 2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis John Roy Young Joshua Mark Munns Paul Christopher Reuben and Jonathon Michael Cote four security contractors were kidnapped with an Austrian named Bert Nussbaumer on November 16 2006 They appeared in two hostage videos released in December 2006 and January 2007 The kidnapped contractors stated in their video that they would not be released until the following demands had been made the withdrawal of American troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages s release Four fingers were sent to U S authorities in February 2008 The fingers belonged to Munns Reuben Cote and Nussbaumer The bodies of Young Nussbaumer Munns and Reuben were recovered in March 2008 Cote s body was recovered in April 2008 34 35 Ronald Withrow a contractor was kidnapped along with his translator and driver on 5 January 2007 The translator and driver were found dead the next day One of Withrow s fingers was sent to U S authorities in February 2008 His body was recovered in March 2008 36 Steven Charles Vincent a journalist was kidnapped along with his Iraqi translator Nouriya Itais Wadi in Basra on 2 August 2005 They were bound gagged and taken to an undisclosed location where for five hours they were beaten and interrogated then taken to the outskirts of town and shot They were found by British and Iraqi policemen but Vincent was dead shot in the back at close range Wadi survived the attack despite having been shot three times 7 6 released escaped Edit Jill Carroll a freelance reporter for the Boston based Christian Science Monitor was kidnapped in West Baghdad on January 7 2006 by unknown gunmen Her Iraqi translator was killed during the abduction Her Iraqi driver escaped Her kidnappers demanded the release of all female Iraqi prisoners She was shown in four videos during her captivity She was released on March 30 2006 Micah Garen a freelance reporter was kidnapped along with his Iraqi translator Amir Doushi on August 13 2004 near Nasiriyah They were freed on August 22 2004 7 Roy Hallums an employee of a Saudi trading company was seized along with Roberto Tarangoy Inus Dewari and three Iraqi security guards on November 1 2004 in Baghdad The three Iraqi security guards were later released Dewari was released on November 10 2004 Hallums was shown in a video aired on January 25 2005 Tarongoy was released on June 22 2005 On September 7 2005 Hallums was freed in an operation conducted by Delta Force Thomas Hamill a truck driver was seized in a deadly convoy attack on April 9 2004 see 2004 Iraq KBR Convoy Ambush He was later shown in a video but escaped on May 1 2004 37 Issa T Salomi a civilian contractor was kidnapped by a Shiite militia group on January 23 2010 and shown in a video in February 2010 His kidnappers demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners the withdrawal of all foreign troops from Iraq the prosecution of security contractors employed by Blackwater Worldwide and compensation to Iraqi families He was released on March 25 2010 in exchange for four Iraqi prisoners 38 39 40 Paul Taggart a freelance photographer was kidnapped on October 10 2004 He was released on October 12 2004 7 5 of unknown fate Edit Kirk von Ackermann contractor for a Turkish company disappeared on October 9 2003 after leaving a meeting at FOB Pacesetter His vehicle was found abandoned later that same day Timothy Edward Bell a contractor for Halliburton went missing on April 9 2004 He was never seen in a video and was declared dead in 2010 41 Aban Abdel Malek Mahmoud Elias an Iraqi American engineer from Denver was shown being held hostage in a video on May 3 2004 He has not been seen or heard from since Radim Sadeq Mohammed Sadeq also called Dean Sadek a businessman kidnapped on November 2 2004 in Baghdad He was shown in a video that month and in another video dated Christmas Eve but released in late January He has not been seen or heard from since His kidnappers demanded the release of Iraqi prisoners Jeffrey Ake a water bottling plant contractor was kidnapped on April 11 2005 and shown in a videotape two days later He has not been seen or heard from since His kidnappers demanded 2 million in exchange for his release After three weeks of negotiations the kidnappers cut off all communication Ake is presumed dead and his family held a private funeral for him in the summer of 2014 42 43 44 Non coalition EditAlgeria Edit 2 killed Edit Ali Belaroussi Algerian Charge d affaires and Azzedin Belkadi Algerian diplomatic attache were kidnapped along with their driver on July 21 2005 in Baghdad 45 The Algerian government on July 27 2005 said the diplomats had been killed 46 47 Austria Edit 1 killed Edit Bert Nussbaumer a contractor was kidnapped along with four Americans on November 16 2006 They appeared in two hostage videos released in December 2006 and January 2007 Their kidnappers demanded the withdrawal of America troops from Iraq and the release of all Iraqi prisoners in exchange for the hostages release One of Nussbaumer s fingers was sent to U S authorities in February 2008 Three of the Americans and Nussbaumer were found dead in March 2008 The other American was found dead in April 2008 34 Bangladesh Edit 1 released Edit Abul Kashem a truck driver was kidnapped on October 28 2004 as he ferried supplies to Kuwait He was freed on December 10 2004 48 Brazil Edit 1 killed Edit Joao Jose Vasconcelos an engineer was kidnapped on January 19 2005 in an ambush on the Baghdad Airport road His body was found more than two years after his kidnapping It is believed that he died from injuries sustained in the abduction shortly after arriving at the house where his captors planned to hold him 49 Canada Edit 1 killed Edit Zaid Meerwali who held dual Canadian Iraqi citizenship was seized August 2 2005 and 250 000 in ransom was demanded Officials in Canada said that on August 15 2005 he had been shot in the head while the family was preparing the ransom money 50 6 released escaped Edit Fadi Ihsan Fadel a Syrian Canadian employed by the International Rescue Committee was taken hostage in Najaf on April 8 2004 but released on April 16 2004 Naji al Kuwaiti was taken hostage on April 28 2004 and released on May 4 2004 Scott Taylor was a journalist abducted by Ansar al Islam in Tal Afar on September 9 2004 He was released five days later James Loney and Harmeet Singh Sooden human rights workers with Christian Peacemaker Teams were kidnapped in Baghdad on November 27 2005 along with an American and Briton Their Iraqi driver and Iraqi translator were not taken 1 They were released as the result of a coalition military operation on March 23 2006 See 2005 2006 Christian Peacemaker hostage crisis Fairuz Yamulky was abducted on September 6 2004 Her driver and another employee were not taken Yamulky managed to escape with the help of one of her captors sixteen days later 51 1 of unknown fate Edit Rifat Mohammed Rifat an Iraqi born prison worker was taken hostage on April 8 2004 He is still missing The People s Republic of China Edit 15 released Edit Seven workers Xue Yougui Lin Jinping Li Guiwu Li Guiping Wei Weilong Chen Xiaojin and Lin Kongming were abducted on April 11 2004 near Fallujah but were released on April 13 2004 52 Eight unemployed construction workers were kidnapped by a group calling itself The Islamic Resistance al Numan Brigades on January 18 2005 as they tried to leave the country They were released four days later The group included three teenagers 53 54 Cyprus Edit 1 released Edit Garabet Jean Jekerjian a man with dual Lebanese Cypriot citizenship was abducted in August 2005 He was released on December 31 2005 in exchange for 200 000 ransom 55 56 Egypt Edit 5 killed Edit Mohammed Mutawalli a purported Egypt spy was beheaded in a video on August 10 2004 57 Nasser Juma contractor kidnapped on August 27 2004 his body was found in the town of Baiji Iraq on 5 September 2004 58 Ibrahim Mohammed Ismail 39 driver 16 January 2005 59 60 Ihab al Sherif Egyptian envoy to Iraq kidnapped in Baghdad on July 3 2005 and reported killed on July 7 2005 61 Ibrahim al Sayyid al Hilali translator abducted 9 December 2005 62 16 released Edit Victor Tawfiq Gerges truck driver was kidnapped with Turk Bulent Yanik on 1 June 2004 He was released on 18 June 2004 63 Alsayeid Mohammed Alsayeid Algarabawi truck driver was kidnapped on 6 July 2004 He was released on 19 July 2004 64 65 66 Mohammed Ali Sanad truck driver was seized with three Indians and three Kenyans on 22 July 2004 He was released on 1 September 2004 67 68 Mohamed Mamdouh Qutb diplomat was seized in Baghdad on 23 July 2004 He was released on 26 July 2004 69 70 Six employees for Iraqna the local brand name for Egyptian telecoms giant Orascom were kidnapped on 24 September 2004 with the first two being released on 28 September 2004 71 Four engineers Mohammed al Saadi Hussein Ashour Waleed Ismail and Sayed Shaaban working for Egyptian telecoms giant Orascom were kidnapped in Baghdad on 6 February 2005 They were freed the next day by US forces 72 Nabil Tawfiq Sulieman and Matwali Mohammed Salim engineers for the firm Unitrak were abducted on a road west of Baghdad a video on an Islamic website said on 19 March 2005 They were released a day later 73 1 of unknown fate Edit Samuel Edward an engineer working for Iraqna Mobile Company was kidnapped on September 26 2005 in Baghdad His Iraqi driver was left unharmed 74 France Edit 4 released Edit Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot two reporters were kidnapped along with their Syrian driver on August 21 2004 The driver was rescued on November 12 The two journalists were released on December 21 France allegedly paid 15 million in ransom for their release Florence Aubenas a reporter for the daily Liberation She disappeared January 5 2005 but was released with her Iraqi translator Hussein Hanoun al Saadi on June 11 France allegedly paid 10 million in ransom for their release Bernard Planche a water engineer was kidnapped in Mansour on December 5 2005 He was freed on January 7 2006 when his captors fled the house where they were holding him during a military operation 75 Germany Edit 5 released Edit Susanne Osthoff an archaeologist was kidnapped along with her Iraqi driver on November 25 2005 according to the German Foreign Ministry They were released on December 18 2005 after Germany allegedly paid the kidnappers 5 million ransom It is also speculated that Germany released Mohammed Ali Hammadi in exchange for Osthoff s release Thomas Nitzschke and Rene Braeunlich two engineers were kidnapped by gunmen near Baiji on January 24 2006 They appeared in four videos and their kidnappers demanded that Germany end its cooperation with the Iraqi regime close its mission in Baghdad ensure that all German businesses cease dealings there and the release of all Iraqi prisoners held by US forces On May 2 2006 the German government announced the two had been freed Germany allegedly paid 5 million ransom for their release 76 Hannelore Marianne Krause worked for the Austrian embassy in Baghdad was kidnapped on February 6 2007 with her son Sinan in Baghdad Their kidnappers demanded that Germany withdraw its troops from Afghanistan She was shown in three videos during her captivity Hannelore was released on July 11 2007 Her son s fate is unknown 77 Hella Mewis an arts curator was kidnapped by armed militants in Baghdad on July 20 2020 78 She was freed by Iraq military on July 24 2020 79 1 of unknown fate Edit Sinan Krause a technician at the Iraqi Foreign Ministry was kidnapped on February 6 2007 along with his mother Hannelore in Baghdad Their kidnappers demanded that Germany withdraw its troops from Afghanistan Hannelore was released on July 10 2007 but Sinan hasn t been seen or heard from since a video was released on September 11 2007 The video was recorded before Hannelore was released It showed Sinan saying goodbye to his mother Their kidnappers issued a final 10 day deadline in the video for Germany to withdraw its troops from Afghanistan They threatened to kill Sinan if their demand was not met On April 24 2008 his father appealed to the captors to release his son The kidnappers ignored the plea and Sinan s fate is unknown 80 India Edit 49 released Edit July 22 2004 Antaryami Sukhdev Singh and Tilak Raj Kuwait and Gulf Link KGL a Kuwaiti transport company working for the US military truck drivers were seized in Fallujah during the Iraq War by a little known militant group calling itself the Islamic Secret Army other abductees included an Egyptian and three Kenyans They were released September 1 2004 after KGL paid about half a million US dollars in ransom the negotiators from the Indian side included ambassador to Iraq B B Tyagi ambassador to Oman Talmiz Ahmad ambassador to Kuwait Swashpawan Singh diplomat Zikrur Rahman and E Ahamed the Minister of State for External Affairs 81 82 83 Indian journalist V Sudarshan s Anatomy of an Abduction How the Indian Hostages in Iraq were Freed 2008 provides a detailed report of the kidnapping 84 46 Indian nurses were taken hostage on June 29 2014 by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant ISIS from the Tikrit Teaching Hospital in Tikrit in central Iraq when it fell to the jihadist group during the First Battle of Tikrit 85 86 Most of the nurses had recently immigrated to Iraq in search for better employment opportunities despite the ongoing war The city of Tikrit had fallen under siege by ISIS weeks prior to formal hostilities in early June and the hospital had run out of food supplies which were later provided by an official of the Ministry of Health Iraq The official and two Iraqi soldiers who were guarding the hospital left days prior to the takeover by ISIS on June 29 as had the local Iraqi nurses weeks ago 86 ISIS first moved the nurses to the hospital s basement and initially refused to hand them over After negotiations by the Embassy of India in Baghdad lead by ambassador Ajay Kumar Amban and former ambassador B B Tyagi the group agreed to release the hostages in Mosul They were shifted to Mosul by ISIS and handed over to Indian officials on July 4 2014 the officials took them to Erbil and they were flown out to India from the Erbil International Airport 85 86 The majority of the nurses were from the state of Kerala and chief minister Oommen Chandy kept in touch with the hostages throughout the ordeal 86 The nurses later stated they were treated well by ISIS militants some of whom they had treated during the initial takeover of the Tikrit hospital 87 86 Two 2017 Indian films are based on the incident Take Off 2017 88 89 and Tiger Zinda Hai 2017 85 39 killed 1 escaped Edit Forty Indian migrant workers from Punjab Himachal Pradesh Bihar and West Bengal went missing in June 2014 after Mosul fell to the Islamic State In 2015 one of them Harjit Masih managed to flee from the clutches of ISIS and said all other Indians were killed in the mass executions in ISIL occupied Mosul But the External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj refused to buy his claims then In July 2017 she said she would not declare the missing persons dead until she had a concrete evidence 90 Swaraj informed the Parliament of India that sources who gave the government the confidence of not abandoning the search for the abducted Indians in Iraq include a head of state and a foreign minister of another country She had then refused to disclose the identity of the sources citing diplomatic confidentiality 90 On 20 March 2018 Swaraj declared in the parliament that 39 missing Indian workers had been killed I have concrete proof that 39 Indians have been killed We wanted to give the families closure The physical remains of the dead were repatriated by the government in a special aircraft 90 Indonesia Edit 4 released Edit Istiqomah binti Misnad and Casingkem binti Aspin two female workers of an electricity firm were kidnapped along with six Iraqis and two Lebanese in late September 2004 They appeared in a video broadcast on Al Jazeera on September 30 2004 The Islamic Army demanded that Indonesia free Abu Bakar Bashir in exchange for the release of the two women Bashir refused to be released for the two Indonesian women and Indonesia also said it would not free him The Islamic Army also demanded that the Lebanese government withdraw all nationals working in Iraq for the release of the two Lebanese men The women were released on October 4 2004 The six Iraqis were freed later that month and the two Lebanese were freed for ransom in November 2004 91 Meutya Hafid a reporter and Budiyanto a cameraman were kidnapped along with their Jordanian driver on February 15 2005 They were freed on February 21 2005 92 Iran Edit 7 released Edit Fereidoun Jahani an Iranian diplomat was kidnapped near Karbala on August 4 2004 He was released on September 27 2004 93 Six Iranian pilgrims and their Iraqi guide were kidnapped on November 28 2005 Their Iraqi driver was wounded but was not abducted The Iraqi guide and two of the Iranian pilgrims both women were released a day later The four male hostages were released on February 10 2006 94 Ireland Edit 1 killed Edit Margaret Hassan the director of CARE International who held British Iraqi and Irish citizenship was kidnapped in Baghdad on October 19 2004 Her Iraqi driver and Iraqi unarmed security guard were not taken She was killed in a video released on November 16 2004 citation needed 1 released Edit Rory Carroll a journalist for the British newspaper The Guardian was abducted on October 19 2005 in Baghdad and released the next day Israel Edit 1 held Edit Elizabeth Tsurkov a researcher was kidnapped on March 26 2023 95 1 released Edit Nabil Razouk an Israeli Arab from East Jerusalem working for the US company Research Triangle International was kidnapped on April 8 2004 He was freed on April 22 2004 after pleas from his family and Palestinians 96 Jordan Edit 2 released Edit Ibrahim al Maharmeh a businessman was kidnapped in Baghdad on March 5 2005 He was released on March 8 2005 after a ransom was paid 97 Mahmoud Suleiman Saidat a driver for the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad was kidnapped on December 20 2006 He was later shown on a videotape calling for the release of failed suicide bomber Sajida Mubarak Atrous al Rishawi He was released on February 21 2007 98 6 of unknown fate Edit Six Jordanians were kidnapped in May 2005 They appeared in a video that aired on Al Jazeera on May 6 2005 They haven t been seen or heard from since 99 Kenya Edit 3 released Edit Faiz Khamis Salim Jalal Mohamed Awadh and Ibrahim Khamis Idd were kidnapped on July 22 2004 with three Indians and an Egyptian They were freed September 1 2004 81 2 of unknown fate Edit Moses Munyao and George Noballa engineers from the Iraqna telephone company were reported kidnapped after an ambush on January 18 2006 They were never found 100 Lebanon Edit 3 released Edit Mohammed Hamad was kidnapped when he was seven years old on October 22 2004 after being lured into a car by his captors while he was walking home from school His captors told him his father was hurt in a car accident They also told his father that they would behead his son unless they were paid 150 000 They eventually lowered their demand to 70 000 and then lowered it again to 1 725 The 1 725 ransom was paid and Mohammed was released on October 29 2004 101 102 Marwan Ibrahim al Qassar and Mohammed Jawdat Hussein were kidnapped by the Islamic Army in Iraq in late on in September 2004 along with six Iraqis and two Indonesian women They appeared in a video broadcast on Al Jazeera on September 30 2004 The Islamic Army demanded that Indonesia free Abu Bakar Bashir in exchange for the release of the two women Bashir refused to be released for the two Indonesian women and Indonesia also said it would not free him The Islamic Army also demanded that the Lebanese government withdraw all nationals working in Iraq for the release of the two Lebanese men The Iraqis and the two Indonesian women were freed in October 2004 Marwan and Mohammed were freed in exchange for a ransom in November 2004 103 104 Morocco Edit 2 killed Edit Driver Abderrahim Boualam and assistant Abdelkrim El Mouhafidim both workers at the Moroccan embassy in Baghdad went missing on October 20 2005 while driving back from Jordan On October 25 2005 militants claimed their kidnapping On November 3 2005 Al Qaeda in Iraq said in an internet statement that it had decided to kill the two hostages Ziad Khalaf Raja al Karbouly later confessed to having arranged the kidnappings He stated that two Kurds were kidnapped with the Moroccans and were later released 105 Nepal Edit 12 killed Edit Main articles Nepal hostage crisis and 2004 Nepal riots Gyanendra Shrestha Manoj Kumar Thakur Rajendra Kumar Shrestha Jit Bahadur Thapa Budha Kumar Shas Ramesh Khadka Mangal Bahadur Limbu Sanjaya Kumar Thakur Lalan Sing Koirala Chhok Bahadur Thapa Prakash Adhikari and Bishnu Hari Thapa were twelve Nepalese taken hostage on August 23 2004 A video from August 31 2004 showed the beheading of one and the shooting in the head of the eleven others 106 1 released Edit Inus Dewari was kidnapped November 1 2004 in Baghdad He was released on November 6 2004 Palestine Edit 1 of unknown fate Edit Rami Daas a 26 year old Palestinian student was reported by his family as having been kidnapped on May 9 2005 by gunmen in the northern city of Mosul His fate is unknown 107 Pakistan Edit 2 killed Edit Azad Hussein Khan an engineer and Sajjad Naeem a driver were kidnapped on July 23 2004 and killed Their captors demanded their Kuwaiti company leave Iraq In a video released on July 29 2004 their bodies were shown An Iraqi driver who was held with them was released 108 109 13 released Edit Amjad Hafeez a driver was kidnapped on June 25 2004 He was freed on July 2 2004 An embassy worker was abducted on April 25 2005 but released two weeks later Eleven construction workers were kidnapped from their bus near Nasiriyah on August 13 2005 They were released August 22 2005 Russia Edit 4 killed Edit Fyodor Zaitsev third secretary of the Russian Embassy in Iraq and embassy employees Rinat Agliulin Anatoly Smirnov and Oleg Fyodoseyev were abducted after an ambush in Baghdad on June 3 2006 Another employee Vitaly Titov was shot and killed A group claimed to have executed them on June 21 2006 and a video released on June 25 2006 confirmed their deaths The kidnapper group gave 48 hours to the Putin administration to pull out his troops from Chechnya The bodies of the four diplomats were found in 2012 110 111 5 released Edit Three energy workers working for the Interenergoservis were kidnapped April 12 2004 along with five Ukrainians and a man immediately released all were released the next day with the insurgents apologizing noting that they did not realise they were Russian and Ukrainian 17 Andrei Meshcheryakov and Aleksandr Gordiyenko employees of Interenergoservis were kidnapped on May 10 2004 but released on May 17 2004 Somalia Edit 1 released Edit Ali Ahmed Mousa a truck driver was taken hostage on July 29 2004 in order to convince his Kuwaiti employer to withdraw from Iraq He was released several days later South Africa Edit 4 of unknown fate Edit Johann Enslin 48 Andre Durant 38 Hardus Greeff 43 and Callie Scheepers 48 contractors the so called Baghdad Four were abducted at a false roadblock in Baghdad by unidentified men on December 10 2006 along with five Iraqis The Iraqis were released two days later Ten days after the abduction Andre spoke to his wife briefly in a proof of life phone call There were some talks that these four were still alive in May 2010 but since then there has been no word on their fate and their families later had them declared legally dead 112 113 Sri Lanka Edit 1 released Edit Dinesh Dharmendran Rajaratnam a truck driver was kidnapped on October 28 2004 while ferrying supplies to Kuwait He was released on December 10 2004 48 Sudan Edit 6 killed Edit Six Sudanese truck drivers were kidnapped by Ansar al Sunnah in April 2005 The six men were shot dead in a video posted on the Internet 114 9 released Edit Noureddin Zakaria a translator was kidnapped on October 30 2004 in Ramadi He was released on November 6 2004 115 Six Sudanese including the second secretary at the Sudanese embassy were abducted in Baghdad on December 23 2005 They were released on December 31 2005 after Sudan closed its embassy in Baghdad 116 Mohammed Haroun Hamad a truck driver was kidnapped along with his colleague Maher Ataya sometime in March 2005 The Islamic Army claimed responsibility in a statement and internet video for the abductions on March 9 The group claimed that a Sharia Council would decide their fates On April 6 2005 a second video announced that the Sharia Council decided to release Mohammed and Maher 117 Sweden Edit 1 released Edit Ulf Hjertstrom an oil broker was taken hostage on March 25 2005 He was released on May 30 2005 118 Switzerland Edit 2 released Edit Two Swiss nationals a married couple who worked for a NGO were kidnapped on April 20 2004 by an unknown group They were held hostage for 48 hours and released on April 22 2004 after relatives of the kidnappers from the Obaida tribe promised to pressure Yemeni authorities Some reports listed the couple as tourists 119 Syria Edit 1 released Edit Mohammed al Joundi the driver for Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot was kidnapped on August 21 2004 He was freed by US troops in Fallujah on November 12 2004 Turkey Edit 4 killed Edit Durmus Kumdereli a truck driver was kidnapped on August 14 2004 He was having dinner in a restaurant a few miles away from Mosul He was kidnapped in that restaurant with Mustafa Koksal by Abu Musab al Zarqawi s men Kumdereli was decapitated on August 17 2004 by Jama at al Tawhid wal Jihad Koksal was freed on August 18 2004 Dursun Ali Yildirim Tek a truck driver was kidnapped on July 23 2006 Two videos were broadcast on the internet in which his captors demanded the Turkish government end all cooperation with Iraq and that they shut down the company Tek worked for In the second video a 72 hour deadline was issued in which Turkey had to give in to the captors demands or Tek would be executed He was killed in October after the deadline passed and his body was found near Baghdad s Airport His body was identified a month and a half later 120 Murat Yuce a truck driver was kidnapped in Iraq along with his colleague Aytullah Gezmen in late July 2004 A video showing Abu Ayyub al Masri shooting Yuce in the head was posted on a web site on August 2 2004 Aytullah was released a month later 121 Maher Kemal a contractor was reported beheaded on October 11 2004 122 6 released Edit Bulent Yanik a truck driver was kidnapped on June 1 2004 and released on June 18 123 Abdulkadir Tanrikulu a businessman abducted by gunmen from the Bakhan Hotel in Baghdad on January 13 2005 He was freed on June 29 2005 124 Ali Musluoglu a businessman was kidnapped in Baghdad on May 19 2005 He was released on September 20 2005 in exchange for a 250 000 ransom 125 Aytullah Gezmen a truck driver was kidnapped on July 31 2004 along with his colleague Murat Yuce Murat was executed on August 16 2004 Aytullah was released a month later after he repented working for the Americans 121 Mustafa Koksal a truck driver was kidnapped on August 14 2004 along with his colleague Durmus Kumdereli Kumdereli was beheaded on August 17 2004 Koksal was freed on August 18 2004 Hasan Eskimutlu a technician was kidnapped on June 14 2006 along with his Iraqi translator His captors sent a video to Aljazeera in which they demanded the Turkish government withdraw its ambassador from Baghdad and that they put pressure on the Iraqi government to free male and female prisoners from U S and Iraqi prisons They were freed on August 2 2006 126 United Arab Emirates Edit 1 released Edit Naji Rashid al Nuaimi the first secretary of the UAE s embassy in Baghdad was abducted by gunmen on May 16 2006 His captors demanded that the UAE abandon its presence in Iraq Nuaimi was freed on May 30 2006 His Sudanese driver was wounded and later died of his injuries 127 See also EditForeign hostages in Afghanistan Foreign hostages in Nigeria Foreign hostages in SomaliaReferences Edit a b c d Mathewson Judy November 30 2005 U S Christian Group Names Captives in Iraq Blames U S U K Bloomberg News Retrieved April 24 2013 John Martinkus talks to Marni Cordell Archived from the original on 2010 01 15 Retrieved 2009 11 09 Google saved Australian hostage BBC News October 19 2004 Retrieved May 2 2010 Smiles Sarah May 29 2006 Iraqi family gets no answer to asylum plea The Age Melbourne ABC net au Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 2008 05 15 Retrieved 2009 11 09 Body discovery stokes Iraq hostage tension China Daily 2004 07 23 a b c d e f g Iraq Journalists Abducted 2003 09 Retrieved 29 July 2015 Body of missing Dane found in Iraq Breaking News 21 April 2004 Retrieved 29 July 2015 a b Iraqi hostages freed without bloodshed 9 June 2004 Retrieved 29 July 2015 McGrory Daniel May 22 2006 How 45m secretly bought freedom of foreign hostages The Times London Retrieved May 2 2010 Noriaki Imai profile BBC Macedonian Iraq hostages killed BBC 22 October 2004 Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Home Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso Retrieved 29 July 2015 Embassy confirms Filipino hostage s release Archived 2005 03 26 at the Wayback Machine ABC News Online Iraq hostage free after 7 months CNN Munaf s ten year prison sentence is final Romanian Times a b INDOlink Indian Diaspora NRI News Russian Ukrainian Hostages In Iraq Freed Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 29 July 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Rayment Sean McElroy Damien June 21 2009 British hostages in Iraq named after bodies found London Daily Telegraph Retrieved May 2 2010 a b Khaleejtimes com Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine a b August Oliver September 4 2009 End the torment says Brown as death of British hostage is confirmed The Times London Retrieved May 2 2010 a b Body of Iraq kidnap victim Alan McMenemy handed over BBC January 20 2012 Retrieved January 20 2012 Independent Newspapers Online Violence rages on in Fallujah despite truce Independent Online Retrieved 29 July 2015 Goode Erica Mizher Qais April 15 2008 Two Journalists Are Released in Iraq The New York Times Retrieved May 2 2010 Kidnapped CBS Journalist Freed In Iraq cbsnews 14 April 2008 Retrieved 25 March 2016 a b Grandjean Guy December 30 2009 Revealed hand of Iran behind Britons Baghdad kidnapping The Guardian London Retrieved May 2 2010 Rayment Sean McElroy Damien June 21 2009 British hostages in Iraq named after bodies found Two British men Jason Creswell and Jason Swindlehurst have been named by the Foreign Office as highly likely to have been killed after being kidnapped and held hostage in Iraq since 2007 The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved May 2 2010 UK hostage released alive in Iraq BBC News December 30 2009 Retrieved May 2 2010 Die Welt 20 November 2014 a b Video shows American hostage beheaded CNN 20 September 2004 Retrieved 30 March 2008 a b FACTBOX Prominent kidnappings of foreigners in Iraq Accessed 12 March 2008 American hostage beheaded video CBC 20 September 2004 Retrieved 2008 03 30 Romans Christine and Rhonda Schaffler American Beheaded in Iraq Dates for Presidential Debates to be Set Dan Rather Apologizes for Bush Story Part 1 accessmylibrary com 20 September 2004 retrieved 9 March 2011 Re killing of Ronald Schulz News yahoo com accessed 16 September 2015 a b Buffalonews com Buffalonews com 2 More Bodies ID d as Kidnapped Contractors nytimes com 28 March 2008 Kidnapped U S contractor found safe May 2 2004 CNN Londono Ernesto Fadel Leila February 6 2010 American contractor kidnapped in Iraq The Washington Post Contractor found in Iraq family rejoices World news Mideast N Africa Conflict in Iraq NBC News NBC News Retrieved 29 July 2015 San Diego man recounts Iraq kidnapping 12 August 2010 Taloney Jessica April 8 2011 Memorial Service For Contractor Missing In Iraq WKRG TV Archived from the original on May 22 2015 Retrieved July 26 2013 Slevin Peter We Have Your Husband The Washington Post Retrieved May 2 2010 Healy Jack May 21 2011 With Withdrawal Looming Trails Grow Cold for Americans 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