Two Indian hostages in Libya rescued: Swaraj

Two Indians, who were held captive in Libya for over a year, have been rescued, external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj said on Thursday.

By :  migrator
Update: 2016-09-15 14:28 GMT
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj

New Delhi

“I am happy to inform that T Gopalakrishna (AP) & C BalaramKishan (Telangana) who were captive in Libya since 29 July, 2015 have been rescued,” she tweeted. The two Indians, who were teaching at Libya’s Sirte University, were abducted by Islamic State militants in July last year. Four Indian men were detained at a checkpoint about 50km from Sirte, hometown of former Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi, in July while on their way back to India. 

Two of them – Lakshmikanth from Raichur in Karnataka and Bengaluru resident Vijay Kumar – were released after two days in captivity. The abduction of the four Indians came a year after 39 Indians were kidnapped from the Iraqi city of Mosul. Most of Sirte fell to the Islamic State in May and the university, where the four were working, is located in the IS stronghold. 

The university has not been operational since February this year and government officials believe that the four had perhaps stayed on to collect their dues. There are 2,000 Indians at present in conflict-hit Libya, who stayed back despite many advisories urging them to leave the country. Since most of the Indian mission staff to Libya is now based out of Tunis, it is proving to be difficult task for officials to track the developments inside the trouble-torn country.

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