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| A video tape aired by the
pan-Arab al-Jazeera TV channel on Tuesday shows eight hostages
holding Chinese passports standing in a row, flanked by masked militants
who read a statement, demanding the Chinese government clarify its stance
on Iraq. (Xinhua Photo) |
BAGHDAD, Jan. 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese Foreign
Ministry Spokesman Kong Quan expressed Tuesday China's deep concern over the
kidnapping of eight Chinese nationals in Iraq.
"China's Foreign Ministry is taking all measures to
rescue the hostages," the spokesman told reporters in Beijing.
The Chinese Embassy in Baghdad confirmed on Tuesday
that eight Chinese nationals were kidnapped by militants in Iraq, pledging that
the Chinese government would spare no effort to secure their release.
Embassy diplomats said they were making all efforts
to rescuethe eight hostages, who went missing last week while travelling to
Jordan.
The eight kidnapped persons are ordinary Chinese
citizens who went to Iraq on individual basis to seek jobs by themselves in the
country, Kong said.
Since they failed to find any work, they rent an
automobile to leave Iraq but were kidnapped on the way, he added."The Chinese
people has always cherished friendly feelings toward the Iraqi people and
sympathized and supported them," Kong said.
Sources told Xinhua the Chinese, from China's eastern
province of Fujian, were construction workers in a project to rebuild an Iraqi
plant in the southern Iraqi city of Najaf.The eight went missing last week while
travelling to Jordan,according to the sources.
They said the project, signed with Iraq's interim
government,has nothing to do with the US-led multinational forces.A video tape
aired by the al-Jazeera TV channel on Tuesday showed the eight hostages holding
Chinese passports standing in a row, flanked by masked militants.
The pan-Arab channel did not release the text all at
once, but part of the statement read out by one militant indicated that the
group could free the hostages on condition that they "will quit their work with
the occupation forces."
In a handwritten note delivered with the tape, the
insurgent group calling itself al-Numan Brigades threatened to "kill the eight
within 48 hours" unless China meet their demands. Enditem |