Gunmen in military uniform seized 18 Turkish workers from a sports
stadium they were building in northeastern Baghdad on Wednesday, their
company said, in what Ankara said appeared to have been a targeted
kidnapping of its countrymen.
Diplomats have said Turkey could
suffer reprisals after abandoning months of reticence to launch air
strikes against ISIS in neighbouring Syria and open its bases to a
US-led coalition fighting the Sunni Muslim militants.
The workers
were taken in the predominantly Shi'ite district of Habibiya, Iraqi
Interior Ministry spokesperson Brigadier General Saad Maan said.
There
was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Turkish Deputy Prime
Minister Numan Kurtulmus said investigators in both countries were
cooperating.
"People
dressed in military uniforms broke down the door at 03:00 (midnight
GMT) and abducted all these people," said Ugur Dogan, chief executive of
Nurol Holding, which owns the construction firm.
Last year, 46
Turkish citizens were seized by ISIS militants in the Iraqi city of
Mosul. They were released unharmed after more than three months in
captivity.
Islamic State regularly claims suicide bomb attacks in
Baghdad, but Shi'ite militias and other armed groups are also active
there.
The Shi'ite-led government in Baghdad has intensified
security in the city this week ahead of plans to ease access to the
fortified Green Zone and eliminate no-go zones set up by militias and
political parties.
Black sports utility vehicles
Iraqi
Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, who is trying to reform a governing
system he says is riddled with graft and incompetence, accused "corrupt
and organised criminals" of Wednesday's kidnappings, but did not finger a
particular group or specify the Turkish abductees.
Two police
sources said the gunmen arrived in a convoy of black sports utility
vehicles. Maan denied reports that up to three Iraqis had also been
abducted, and put the number of people kidnapped at 16.
A
spokesperson for the Turkish foreign ministry said Turkish nationals had
been specifically picked out by the attackers, without giving further
details.
An ISIS video released last month accused Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan of "selling the country to crusaders" and of
allowing US access to Turkish bases "just to keep his post".
Kurtulmus
also said no contact had been established with a Turkish soldier who
went missing late on Tuesday following cross-border fire from ISIS-held
territory in northern Syria, which left one other soldier dead.
Thursday, September 03, 2015
Turkish workers kidnapped in Baghdad
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