Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the country

Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the country

Amarendra Yarlagada

BBC Telugu

grey-placeholder Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the country8c0830b0-5bc4-11f0-9b31-0de8e3acd144.jpg Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the countryKoteswara Rao

Amarlingaswara Rao is one of the three missing since the abduction in Mali.

One week after the abduction of three Indians in Mali, their family says they still have no information about their whereabouts and worry about their safety.

The Foreign Ministry of India said that the men who worked in the cement factory in Mali were forcibly taken by a group of “armed attackers” last Tuesday.

The Mali government has not yet commented, but the abduction took place on one day. Many attacks were done African country.

According to government statistics, from the 1990 1990s, India has lived in the country, which has a trade relations in the country.

The events of the last week come in Five Indian citizens were abducted During the attacks by armed men killed in dozens of soldiers in April in April, according to the report of the royators. There is no update about their whereabouts.

Niger, Mali and Burkina Faso are struggling with the rebellion connected to the Al-Qaeda and Islamic State (IS), which started in North Mali in North Mali, and then spread to neighboring countries.

Mali is the eighth largest nation in the African continent, and falls into the Saheel region of Africa, which describes the World Terrorism Index (GTI) as the “center of global terrorism” earlier this year. According to GTI, the region has “half of all the deaths related to terrorism”.

One day after the abduction, a day after the abduction, the Foreign Ministry of India called the citizens who lived in Mali, to “be extremely careful, to be aware, and (the capital of Mali) to stay close to the Indian Embassy in Bamako.

These people were taken from the Diamond Cement Factory, which was run by the Indian-Bizinus Conclusion Group in Kayus City. The firm and the factory have not made any statements so far. The BBC has reached them for a response.

On the same day the men who were abducted, the jihadist soldiers had simultaneously attacked the military posts on numerous cities in Mali.

The resident of Kaya, a cement factory, told the BBC that the artillery “everywhere” could be heard at the time of the attack.

The abduction has created a wave of panic among the Indian relatives of Those in Africa.

The Government of India said that the officials of the gardener were in touch with the officers, where the men in the factory and the relatives of the abducted men – but BBC Telugu said that very little information was known about their relatives.

grey-placeholder Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the country4124cec0-5c6c-11f0-960d-e9f1088a89fe.jpg Families who are worried about the safety of the abducted Indians in the countryAFP by Getty Images

The military bases in Mali were often attacked many times last month

One of the abducted men who worked as an engineer in the factory, said Pant Venkatramana’s mother that she finally spoke to her son on June 7.

“He said he was going to work and will call later,” said Narasamma, who went by just one name.

“Three days later, we got a company call, but we did not understand what the collar was saying. Later, we saw on television that my son was abducted,” she said.

Venkatramma is from the east Odisha, and his family has complained to the local police and has asked for their help to find them.

External Affairs S. Jaishankar has been supported by former Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik by appealing to “interfere personally in this case” and to ensure Venkatram’s “early and safe relief”.

In the southern states of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, one of the abducted men, Amalingaswara Rao, who works as Assistant General Manager in the factory, is eagerly waiting for family members to return home.

His father Kurkula Venkateshwalu told the BBC Telugu that his son had gone to support Mali eight years ago.

“Salary (in India) was low. There are three children to raise him,” said Mr. Venkateshwalu.

His son was planning to visit India in October and booked a flight ticket. But now he says, they have no idea when they will see him.

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