Fears for missing Iraqi policemen

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/middle_east/6411757.stm

Version 0 of 1.

At least 14 Iraqi policemen have gone missing after leaving their base north of Baghdad to go on leave, Iraqi security officials have said.

Earlier, an alliance of Islamist militant groups said in an internet statement it had kidnapped 18 interior ministry employees in the same area.

This was retaliation for the alleged rape of a Sunni woman by members of the mainly Shia police, it said.

The statement could not be verified. The government denies a rape occurred.

The government is currently pushing a new security plan that will see mainly-Shia police units being deployed in predominantly Sunni districts.

Sunni politicians have accused the police of perpetrating a series of human rights abuses on their community and of turning a blind eye to attacks on them by Shia militants.

In other developments:

<ul class="bulletList">

<li>At least 10 people have died in a bomb attack in Baghdad's Shia stronghold of Sadr City, officials say</li>

<li>Two players from the Ramadi football club are shot dead by gunmen as they take part in a training session, Iraqi police say</li><li>

The United States military in Iraq says it killed eight suspected insurgents in a raid in Salman Pak, south-east of Baghdad </li></ul>

'Some in uniform'

Interior ministry official Brig Gen Abdel Karim Khalaf said the police were in the early stages of investigating the men's disappearance.

"The relatives of these policemen made a report to the Diyala police commander that the policemen have not reached home. They could be missing," he said, quoted by AFP news agency.

It was possible that more than the 14 reported missing had disappeared, he said, adding that some of them would have been in uniform.

The kidnap claim, by the Islamic State of Iraq, was posted on a number of Islamist websites on Friday.

The statement was accompanied by the pictures of 18 men blindfolded and with hands tied behind their backs, seven of them wearing police uniforms.

"This blessed operation is a response to crimes carried out by those infidels in their fight against the Sunnis," it said.

"The latest of the crimes committed by these traitors was to rape our sister in religion."

The woman said in an emotional interview with al-Jazeera TV that she was raped after a wrongful arrest for helping insurgents.

Last week Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki ordered an investigation into the allegations, but the three officers under suspicion were cleared.

Mr Maliki, who is himself Shia, also released a copy of a US medical report saying no rape had taken place.

But the New York Times reported that a nurse, speaking on condition of anonymity, said she had treated the woman at a clinic in her neighbourhood of Amil and had seen signs of sexual and physical assault.