“The nurses are being taken to the Erbil airport," said Chandy adding that they are set to return to India.
Erbil, the capital of Kurdistan, is located about 60 km from Mosul,
the insurgent stronghold which the nurses reached on Thursday night
after being forced out of their hospital in Tikrit.
The Chief Minister said over telephone from New Delhi where he is
camping that the latest development took place due to the efforts of the
Kerala and the Central Government.
Chandy expressed confidence about the safe return of the nurses after
meeting External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj earlier during the
morning hours on Friday.
“I am quite confident that we can bring back our nurses from Iraq,"
he told reporters earlier. "A high-level crisis management group under
the leadership of Sushma Swaraj has been formed. They will be doing
everything to see that the nurses are brought back safely," said the
Kerala Chief Minister.
Chandy requested the media not to go overboard while reporting the
crisis involving the nurses, all belonging to Kerala. "I cannot divulge
all the details," added the Minister.
It may be mentioned here that the 46 nurses were put in a bus from
Tikrit on Thursday afternoon in the company of armed militants and
driven to Mosul, where they reached late at night. On Friday morning,
they were given food and allowed to speak over the telephone to their
families in Kerala.
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