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Seven halliburton workers missing

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   http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/8410377.htm

http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/8410377.htm

Posted on Mon, Apr. 12, 2004
Seven Halliburton subsidiary workers missing after attack

HAMZA HENDAWI
Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Kidnappers have released up to 12 foreigners taken hostage in Iraq, a member of the U.S.-appointed Governing Council said Monday.

Meanwhile, two U.S. troops and seven employees of American contractor Kellogg, Brown & Root, a subsidiary of Houston-based Halliburton, were missing following an attack "two days ago" on a convoy near Abu Ghraib, west of Baghdad, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez said Monday. He refused to say whether they had been abducted.

More than 30 foreigners from at least 12 countries - including a Mississippi man whose fate also was unclear - have been kidnapped in recent days by insurgents.

Also Monday, Beijing appealed to Iraqi authorities to rescue seven Chinese civilians who were kidnapped in central Iraq

In an interview with the Arab broadcaster Al-Jazeera, Governing Council member Mohsen Abdul-Hamid did not identify the nationalities of the hostages he said were released or where they were.

"Twelve foreign hostages have been released today and we hope that the rest of the hostages will be released soon," said Abdul-Hamid, a Sunni Muslim, who is also the head of the Iraqi Islamic Party.

Earlier, Muthanna Harith, spokesman for Islamic Clerics Committee, said insurgents have released nine hostages of various nationalities, including Turks and Pakistanis. It was not clear if he and Abdul-Hamid were referring to the same hostages.

The nine were truck drivers for military supply convoys, which have come under heavy attack in recent days by gunmen on the western and southern outskirts of Baghdad.

Eight of the nine freed hostages appeared in a video broadcast Sunday on Al-Jazeera. The eight included two Turks, three Pakistanis, a Nepalese, a Filipino and an Indian. The identity of the ninth hostage was not immediately known.

Last week, eight South Korean missionaries also were released or escaped.

"We believe that nine were released last night or today," Harith said.

He said he had no word on three Japanese civilians still being held.

In Tokyo, optimism faded that the Japanese hostages would be released quickly after a top government spokesman suggested authorities were no longer confident of their safety.

Vice President Dick Cheney, in Tokyo on a weeklong Asia tour, promised Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi the United States would "do everything we can to be of assistance."

The Japanese hostages - two aid workers and a photojournalist - were being held by a previously unknown group calling itself the "Mujahedeen Brigades," which demanded Japan pull its troops out of Iraq within three days or it would burn the three alive.

The deadline came and went with no word on their fate.

"At one point we were able to make the judgment from various perspectives that they (the Japanese) were safe, but now that's unconfirmed," Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuo Fukuda told a news conference.

His comments came in sharp contrast to official remarks Sunday indicating the three were about to be freed. Japanese media even reported that the military was getting transport planes ready to bring them home.

The American, Thomas Hamill, 43, a truck driver for a U.S. contractor in Iraq, was seized Friday by gunmen who attacked a fuel convoy. His captors threatened to kill him unless U.S. troops ended their assault on the city of Fallujah. The deadline passed Sunday with no word on his fate.

For the Japanese hostages' families, the uncertainty was taking its toll.

"The anxiety is overwhelming," said Takashi Imai, the father of the youngest of the three hostages, 18-year-old Naoki Imai. "I know the troops are in Iraq to make a contribution - but so is our son. They can't just let him be killed."

Imai, who graduated from high school last month, is a member of a group trying to raise awareness about the health hazards facing civilians in Iraq from depleted uranium munitions used by U.S. troops. Another hostage, Nahoko Takato, 34, worked with street children in the war-ravaged country. The third hostage is a freelance photojournalist.

Koizumi has staunchly refused to consider the withdrawal, a position lauded by Cheney.

"We wholeheartedly support the position the prime minister has taken with respect to the question of the Japanese hostages," Cheney told reporters Monday.

Despite Japan's refusal to withdraw from Iraq, officials said Sunday night that they had received word the hostages would be released unharmed.

Fukuda on Monday acknowledged the government had no evidence that was true.

"We haven't been able to confirm what kind of situation the three hostages are in," he said.

The crisis has swelled into Koizumi's biggest test since he assumed office three years ago.

Despite a deeply divided public, Koizumi championed the plan to send about 1,000 non-combat troops to help in the reconstruction of Iraq in this country's biggest and most dangerous overseas military operation since World War II.

The troops began arriving in the southeastern Iraq city of Samawah in January to carry out water purification projects and to assist in the rebuilding of schools and other infrastructure.

China's top diplomat in Iraq, Sun Bigan, said he had contacted its interior minister and Governing Council and appealed for "all necessary measures" to have the hostages released.

The seven Chinese entered Iraq from Jordan on Sunday and were taken later in the day in Fallujah, China's foreign ministry said. State TV said the hostages, aged 18-49, did not work for China's government or a state company.

China has not contributed any troops to the U.S.-led military force in Iraq and it was unclear why the seven were there. But the official Xinhua News Agency described them as villagers who went to the Middle East on their own from a Chinese region with a long history of sending migrants abroad to work.



20 gis 100 iraqis killed since weekend
4 troops killed in volatile iraqi province
7 us soldiers killed 25 wounded in baghdad { April 4 2004 }
76 troops die in iraq fighting first two weeks of april
American jets strike us marines deadly friendly fire { March 30 2004 }
Anarchy across iraq
Broad shiite revolt contradicts whitehouse stand { April 8 2004 }
Child killed in falluja [jpg]
Children die in basra blast { April 21 2004 }
Coalition soldier killed near najaf
Contractor killings will not go unpunished
Coverup over missiles hitting police stations { April 21 2004 }
Deadly week ends in tears for fallen { April 15 2004 }
Decision on falluja attack near { April 25 2004 }
Eleven us soldiers die at revolt at syrian border
Falluja siege traps injured children { April 8 2004 }
Fallujah ceasefire extended
Fighting reported fallujah explosion in baghdad
Firefights erupt in fallujah najaf { April 26 2004 }
Five soldiers killed in iraqi base attack
Group demands end of fallujah seige for hostage life
Helicopter crashed in falluja { April 13 2004 }
Incendiary cleric braces his militia for invasion { April 6 2004 }
Insurgents display new sophistication { April 14 2004 }
Iraq toll higher than expected
Italy vows to stay despite hostage killing
Line between militias civilians blurred
Masked shiites protest [jpg]
Massacre in fallujah on april 15
Military launches major operation in fellujah
Militiamen control parts of 3 iraq cities
Mosque minaret in fallujah leveled
Most fallujah victims are women children
Nine hostage said freed in iraq
Number of wounded skyrocketed april { April 23 2004 }
Russians to evacuate 800 from iraq
Sadr supporters took over government buildings in najaf
Serviceman dies from oil terminal suicide attack { April 25 2004 }
Seven halliburton workers missing
Shiite militia boy [jpg]
Shiite militia marches against us { April 4 2004 }
Shiite supporter [jpg]
Shiites celebrate burning truck [jpg]
Suicide bombers kill 68 in southern iraq
Sunni shiite resistance spreading across iraq
Sunnis shiites are together { April 8 2004 }
Threatens burning japanese alive unless country leaves
US battle guerrillas around fallujah { April 6 2004 }
US bombed iraqi mosque wall
US forces keep pressure on rebels in falluja and najaf { April 28 2004 }
US helicopters strike shiite area in baghdad
US military confirms 12 marines killed
US rockets hit fallujah mosque killing 40 { April 7 2004 }
US seeks truce with fallujah militants
US strike fallujah kills scores najaf insurgents
Us tips toward restraint in fallujah { April 26 2004 }
Us to extend duty tours of 10 thousand troops
Us troops back off from najaf
Us troops carried out unreported massacre in falluja { April 17 2004 }
Us vows to stay course after grisly deaths
Warplanes pound sections of fallujah { April 29 2004 }

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