Four abducted employees of French NGO released

French special police forces stand guard in Strasbourg, France, December 13, 2018. (REUTERS)
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Updated 28 March 2020
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Four abducted employees of French NGO released

  • The months of protests were initially against the government, but America’s military presence in Iraq became a hot-button issue after a US drone strike killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad on Jan. 3

PARIS: Four employees working with a French Christian charity who were kidnapped in Iraq in January have been released, France’s presidency said.
The release of the four men with SOS Chretiens d’Orient (Christians of the Middle East) comes just a day after France said it would withdraw its troops from Iraq due to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic.
The presidential Elysee Palace in Paris said that France had made “every effort to reach this outcome.”
“The president expresses his gratitude to the Iraqi authorities for their cooperation,” the presidency said in a statement.
SOS Chretiens d’Orient said on Twitter it welcomed the release of its four employees — three French nationals and one Iraqi.
The charity also said it “warmly thanked the French authorities for their work, as well as the Iraqi authorities.”
Last week, SOS Chretiens d’Orient said that there had been no news of its four employees and they had received no ransom demand nor had any group claimed responsibility for their abduction.
Antoine Brochon, Julien Dittmar, Alexandre Goodarzy and Tariq Mattoka were kidnapped in Baghdad on Jan.20, as the Iraqi capital was gripped by demonstrations.
The months of protests were initially against the government, but America’s military presence in Iraq became a hot-button issue after a US drone strike killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad on Jan. 3.
SOS Chretiens d’Orient has been working with persecuted Christians in Iraq since 2014 when Daesh terrorists overran the province of Mosul, displacing tens of thousands of minority Christians and Yazidis.

BACKGROUND

Antoine Brochon, Julien Dittmar, Alexandre Goodarzy and Tariq Mattoka were kidnapped in Baghdad on Jan.20, as the Iraq capital was gripped by demonstrations.

The organization has drawn criticism in the past for sending young French volunteers to Syria and Iraq for months at a time.
France said on Wednesday it would withdraw its 200 military personnel working in Iraq, which are mostly trainers to local armed forces, blaming complications arising from the COVID-19 crisis.
Iraq’s military halted all training in early March to minimize the risk of the illness spreading among its forces, including from the US-led coalition helping fight remnants of Daesh.
The US, whose military represents the vast majority of foreign troops in Iraq, has announced the coalition will be temporarily reducing its forces.


India rolls out free HPV vaccines to combat cervical cancer

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India rolls out free HPV vaccines to combat cervical cancer

  • Nationwide HPV vaccination campaign targets 11.5 million 14-year-old girls annually
  • India records about 80,000 cervical cancer deaths, 120,000 new cases every year 

NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched a free HPV vaccination drive on Saturday for young girls across India, which has the world’s highest rate of cervical cancer deaths. 

India records around 120,000 new cases of cervical cancer annually and around 80,000 deaths. It is the second-most-common cancer among women in the country. 

India has the highest number of cervical cancer deaths, followed by China and Indonesia. The number of cases in India is the second highest globally, after China. 

With cervical cancer largely preventable through HPV vaccination and regular screening, the new campaign aims to vaccinate around 11.5 million 14-year-old Indian girls annually. 

“The prime minister launched the nationwide HPV vaccination campaign … describing it as a pivotal step toward empowering India’s ‘Nari Shakti’ (women power) and ensuring the health of mothers and daughters,” Modi’s office said in a statement. 

Under the campaign, a dose of HPV vaccine will be provided free of cost at all government health centers across the country for all 14-year-old girls, said Anupriya Satel, minister of state for health and family welfare. 

“This initiative is a historic step towards protecting our adolescent girls from serious diseases like cervical cancer,” she wrote on X. 

The launch event, which took place in the northern city of Ajmer, also saw a few young girls receiving the HPV vaccine on stage.

The vaccination is a “powerful preventive step that can save lives,” according to a statement from India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, which also said that HPV vaccinations can help families “secure a healthier, cancer-free future for India’s daughters.”