Chinese Foreign Ministry and Embassy officials in Iraq are awaiting
developments from contacts with Iraqi religious leaders who are helping to seek
the release of eight hostages kidnapped and held by militants.
Diplomats contacted the local Association of Islamic Clerics, who helped in
the freeing of seven Chinese held in Iraq last April, sources said.
A video tape aired by the pan-Arab al-Jazeera TV channel on Tuesday
showed the eight hostages holding Chinese passports standing in row, flanked by
masked militants. (Photo: Xinhua)Meanwhile,top Chinese leaders yesterday urged
officials to continue all efforts in seeking the safe rescue of the eight
Chinese workers from Fujian Province, believed abducted as they were travelling
to Jordan.
President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao and other leaders have voiced
concerns about the safety of the men, and ordered Foreign Ministry and Chinese
Embassy officials to take every effective measure to gain their freedom.
Also yesterday, both Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Commerce
officials issued emergency warnings to remind Chinese citizens, including
business people and construction workers, to be cautious of their personal
safety in foreign countries.
The Foreign Ministry said the public should avoid travel in Iraq to avoid
unforeseeable incidents.
The commerce ministry said Chinese business people and construction workers
who wish to work abroad to employ legal channels, and never to trust illegal
intermediary organizations or individuals.
And a Chinese entrepreneur who has been doing business in Iraq for more than
20 years helped to clarify just where the eight hostages were working. He said
the men had no links with US troops.
Liaison man for job
Chen Xianzhong, the last man to have had close contact with the hostages,
said the site where the men once worked is a clothing-processing plant owned by
Chinese business people, according to yesterday's Beijing-based evening
newspaper, the Mirror (Fazhi Wanbao).
Iraqi insurgents have accused the Chinese employees of "working for one of
the Chinese companies helping to build American facilities in Iraq."
"It is fantastic talk to say they are working for the companies helping the
Americans with their Iraq facilities," Chen was quoted as saying.
Chen said a 10 Fujian natives came to Iraq with the hope of earning money
early last year.
They discovered Chen five months after their arrival in Iraq and were
introduced by Chen to a clothes-processing company that required reconstruction.
"They stayed in Iraq for about a year," said Chen, who helped them to fill
out the visa application to Jordan.
Two others, named Chen Bo and Weng Zuxue, stayed in Iraq and didn't go with
their countrymen, who started their journey on January 12.
Chen said the eight people went missing last week while travelling to Jordan.
"I knew something bad had happened because they would've given me a call if
they could get home as expected," Chen said.
Company official
His words were echoed by Yang, Chinese representative of the
clothes-processing company in Iraq.
"I have no idea why they were kidnapped by those militants since our company
doesn't have a single link with the United States," he said.
Yang said the captured Chinese people left the company in November.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry partially confirmed their remarks, saying the
hostages once worked for a Chinese-invested private enterprise in Iraq.
They lost their jobs later and then rented vehicles to leave Iraq, and were
taken hostage as they were travelling, a source said.,
Chinese foreign ministry and embassy officials said they will continue making
round-the-clock efforts to try to free the hostages.
An influential Sunni Muslim body also called for the release of all kidnapped
people in Iraq yesterday on the occasion of the Muslim feast of Adhaa (sacrifice
feast).
The Association of Muslim Scholars appealed in a statement for Muslims "in
all parties that have kidnapped people, to release them and end their suffering
whoever they are, Iraqis or others."
The statement also called on the kidnappers to "deal with them (kidnapped
people) according to the norms of our religion, and not to terrify them by
threatening them with death or other means which Islam forbids."