Hoshiarpur (Punjab): Scores of youths from Punjab and Haryana could be stranded or held captive in Iraq, says the brother of a Punjabi youth taken hostage in Iraq by Sunni insurgents.
Paramjit Singh, younger brother of Kamaljit Singh, a youth from Hoshiarpur who has been abducted by the insurgents, said that conflicting reports about the whereabouts of the Indian hostages were causing concern to his family and families of other Punjabi youths who are missing.
Kamaljit Singh and the others went missing from Mosul town June 11. Paramjit Singh, who returned from Iraq about eight months ago and could not succeed in going back, said he had not heard from his brother for five days.
"We spoke to him last on June 15. After that, there has been no communication from there. An official of the construction company called up last night to say the company was not able to do much in the present circumstances and it had no information on the abducted youth," Paramjit Singh told IANS here Friday.
His brother went to Iraq over 18 months ago. He was working with the Tehrak Noor Al Huda construction company there.
"I spoke to company officials yesterday also. They said they had no idea about the hostages. One Indian hostage managed to sneak a mobile phone and called up a Bangaldeshi national who was released by the insurgents. He told Hasan (Bangladeshi) that they (Indians) would be killed."
Of the 91 men taken hostage earlier, 42 Indians were still with the Sunni militants, Paramjit Singh claimed, quoting information gathered from Iraq.
"The information we are getting here is that the Muslim men were separated from the others and released. The whereabouts of the rest are not known," he pointed out as his inconsolable mother said she "wanted her son Kamaljit back at all cost".
Paramjit Singh, who first went to Iraq in 2011, says youths from northern India were sold to agents in the strife-torn country for just $400.
"We landed in Baghdad and were sold by our agent to another agent there for 400 dollars. We were forced to work in a supermarket from 6 a.m. till 2 a.m. at night.
"I later shifted to the construction company where the work and facilities were better," said Paramjit Singh, whose family belongs to Chhauni Kalan village, five kilometers from here.
He pointed out that the whole game of taking youths to the oil-rich Middle East was managed by agents in Mumbai and New Delhi.
"The agents in Punjab are linked with them but do not have a proper idea of the whole racket," he said.
Paramjit Singh, in his mid-20s, later invited his brother. Paramjit has worked in Dubai too.
Scores of families in Punjab have come out to claim that their family members were in Iraq. Many youths are promised to be taken to Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates but end up in Iraq.
The Punjab government has admitted that nearly 80 youths were in Iraq, including several of them in the list of those abducted and missing.