World | India

Search on for man kidnapped in Herat

An Indian was kidnapped from the Afghanistan province of Herat and the Afghan government assured India yesterday that it will do everything possible to trace the missing worker.

  • IANS
  • Published: 00:17 April 23, 2008
  • Gulf News

New Delhi/Kabul: An Indian was kidnapped from the Afghanistan province of Herat and the Afghan government assured India yesterday that it will do everything possible to trace the missing worker.

Mohammad Nayeem, who was working for a logistics company, was kidnapped by unidentified gunmen on Monday evening. The Afghan government has conveyed to India that local authorities are investigating the incident and have sent out search parties to comb Herat province, official sources said in New Delhi.

"They said they are trying their best to pin down the kidnappers," an official said. The Indian mission in Afghanistan is in touch with the Afghan authorities over the incident.

The kidnappers, who have not been identified, are yet to make any ransom or other demand. They have not issued any death threat either for the abducted Indian worker.

But going by the past record and a sharp escalation in Taliban-led violence in Afghanistan, the radical militia is suspected of being behind the kidnapping, sources said in New Delhi.

Killed

The kidnapping takes place less than a fortnight after a suicide bomber April 12 blew himself up next to an Indian road crew in Afghanistan, killing two Indian workers and their Afghan driver.

Undeterred by suicide attacks on Indian road construction workers, India has reiterated its determination to continue its assistance to reconstruct the war-torn country.

India has pledged $850 million for developmental projects in Afghanistan - a gateway to the energy-rich Central Asia.

Unlike the last time when Indians working on building the crucial 218-km road from Zaranj to Delaram on the Iran-Afghanistan border were targeted, the motive of the hijackers this time is not known.

This is the third incident this year of attacks involving Indian workers in Afghanistan, which is facing a threat from a resurgent Taliban.

On January 3, a suicide bomber ambushed a Border Roads Organisation (BRO) convoy, killing two Indians - Manoj Kumar Singh and Desha Singh of the Indo-Tibetan Border Force. Five other people were injured in the attack.

According to a report yesterday, two road construction workers - an Indian and a Nepalese - went missing in western Afghanistan's province of Herat, and a police official said he feared the two were kidnapped by an unknown group.

The workers went missing on the way between Herat city and Adraskan district of the province on Monday evening, Noor Khan Nikzad, a spokesman for the provincial police chief, said.

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