Death Squads Kidnap 125

 

 

 

Kidnapped next to a marine helicopter base

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Workers Were At A Cement Factory

 

 

 

They were mostly Shiites

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shiites Police Find Them At Farmhouse

 

 

 

 

The captives said "The kidnappers were going to execute the Shiites"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Only An Idiot Would Believe These Stories

 

Shiite death squads kidnap 125 people from a factory, take them to a farmhouse, and release the Sunnis, and shoot the Shiites. The next day the Shiite police find the hostages, and rescue them.

Death squads staged the whole thing to pit Shiites against Sunnis, and create a civil war. The only beneficiary is Israel.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

BAGHDAD, Iraq --  Iraqi police stormed a farm north of Baghdad early today and freed at least 17 people who were snatched a day earlier in a mass kidnapping of about 85 workers and family members at the end of a factory shift.

The U.S. military, meanwhile, reported that four Marines and a soldier were killed in operations south and west of Baghdad, and an explosion of sectarian and revenge killings in Mosul — Iraq's third-largest city — over the past three days claimed 19 lives.

The freed kidnap victims brought to nearly 50 the number of captives who have been either released by their captors or extricated by police. About 30 of the hostages, mainly women and children, were released shortly after they were taken captive Wednesday. It is routine in Iraq for women to take their children to work.

One kidnap victim, a Shiite Muslim, said he was set free Wednesday night after showing the kidnappers a forged ID card listing him as a Sunni. He said two hostages had been killed trying to escape. The man refused to give his name fearing retribution.

"As we were leaving the factory we were stopped by gunmen. They got on our buses and told us to put our heads down. Then they took us to a poultry farm," the man said.

"One of the gunmen told us to stand in one line and then asked the Sunnis to get out of the line. That's what I did. They asked me to prove that I am a Sunni, so I showed the forged ID and three others did the same. They released us," the man said.

A National Security Ministry official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, told The Associated Press that several insurgents holding the kidnap victims were captured during the Thursday morning raid on the farm in the Mishada area, about 20 miles north of the capital.

Police operations were continuing in the area, the official said, in a bid to locate the rest of the victims who were taken at the end of the day shift at al-Nasr General Complex, a former military plant that now makes metal doors, windows and pipes.

Sectarian violence has raged in the region and tit-for-tat kidnappings and revenge killings are common, but nothing had been reported on the scale of Wednesday's mass abduction. The al-Nasr plant is between Baghdad and Taji, a predominantly Sunni Arab area.

The military said the four Marines were killed Tuesday in insurgency-ridden Anbar province, three of them in a roadside bombing and a fourth in a separate operation. A U.S. soldier also died Wednesday south of the capital, the military said, giving no further details.