The ordeal for 46 Indian nurses who were abducted in Iraq by Sunni militants is set to come to an end today when they arrive back in the country on board a special Air India Boeing 777 aircraft.
The Air India flight is currently on its way back home from Erbil in Iraq, carrying 46 Indian nurses and 137 other Indian nationals.
The Indian nurses were freed by Sunni militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (SIS) yesterday.
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They would first land in Mumbai at around 9:30 am for refuelling and catering supplies and then head to Kochi in Kerala where they will arrive at around noon. From Kochi, the flight will proceed to Hyderabad and then Delhi.
The flight left Erbil for India at around 4:30 am IST.
Apart from the nurses, the plane is carrying 137 other Indian nationals, including 70 from Kirkuk in the northern part of Iraq.
The nurses were working at a hospital in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit when ISIS militants began their offensive against government forces on June 9.
The nurses were moved out on Thursday by ISIS militants against their will and detained in the militant-held city of Mosul, 250 kms from Tikrit. The Erbil International airport is about 80 km from Mosul.
A joint-secretary level IFS officer and an IAS woman officer from Kerala are among three Indian officials travelling on the chartered flight.
The nurses were freed by Sunni insurgents after intense diplomatic efforts by India.
"Ultimately it is hope that has triumphed," spokesman Syed Akbaruddin of the External Affairs Ministry said. "I will confirm to you that those Indian nurses who were yesterday moved against their will are now free."
He underlined that "enormous" efforts led to a happy ending.
"This ... didn't happen just like that," he said. "It happened because there was an enormous amount of effort that was put in both within Iraq and outside."
Akbaruddin did not reveal what back-channel efforts New Delhi put in but said that "conventional rules of diplomacy no longer exist" in insurgent-held areas in Iraq.
"India has friends not only in Iraq but outside Iraq. Be rest assured that the support we are getting from within and outside is very substantial."
He said a significant number of Indians were still in the conflict zone. "We are working on those... We will not leave any stone unturned in trying to get back our nationals from an extremely difficult position."
(With agency inputs)
First Published: Saturday, July 05, 2014, 09:13
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