Indian nurses in violence-hit Tikrit safe; Centre monitoring situation closely

Over 10,000 Indians are estimated to be currently living in Iraq

Update: 2014-06-17 14:42 GMT
Iraqi Turkomen raise their weapons during an announcement proclaiming the formation of a defense system to protect their own areas at the Iraqi Turkmen Front Headquarters in the oil-rich city of Kirkuk. (Photo: AP)
Thiruvananthapuram: Amid anxieties of families of Keralite nurses and students stranded in violence-hit cities in Iraq, Kerala Government on Tuesday said it has been doing all that it could for their safe return.
 
As the issue figured in the state Assembly, Minister for Non-Resident Keralalites Affairs K C Joseph said Government had information that 44 nurses stranded in trouble-torn Tikrit in Iraq were safe.
 
Read Also: Indian mission in touch with nurses trapped in Iraq: Foreign Ministry
 
According to the Indian Embassy in Iraq they could be evacuated only when the road from their hospital to the nearest airport became risk-free as heavy bombing was going
on in the area.
The nurses were safe according to a group of officials of International Red Crescent who met them last night,he said. Stating that the situation in Iraq was serious, he said
many places were under the control of ISIL militants.
 
Read Also: Iraq crisis: SOS from Kerala nurses in Iraq, India issues advisory
 
A 24x7 Helpline has been set up under the state NRK agency Norka to provide updated information on the situation. Chief Minister Oommen Chandy had already written to External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj seeking urgent steps for the safe evacuation of the Keralites from the violence-hit areas of Iraq.
 
Out of these stranded nurses, 36 of them were keen to return home immediately, he said.
 
Shiite tribal fighters raise their weapons and chant slogans against
the al-Qaida-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). (Photo: AP) 
 
The state Government had received representations from the parents of students seeking immediate intervention to bring their wards from Iraq.
 
Meanwhile, father of one of the nurses working in Tikrit said his daugther Merina Jose called him this morning and said she was safe but anxious about the future.
 
"My daughter called me this morning. She said she and others working in the same hospital are safe but are anxious about what will happen to them," P A Jose from Kottayam told PTI.
 
Shiite tribal fighters carry a poster of Shiite spiritual leader Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. (Photo: AP)
 
Jose said he and parents of others were praying for the safe return of their children and expected that the Centre would intervene for their evacuation without delay. 
 
See Photos: Militants post pictures of mass killing in Iraq
 
Watch Video: Iraq crisis: Video appears to show Iraqi prisoners ridiculed before being shot, courtesy ITN
 
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