Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
India

Abducted Indian Woman Judith D'Souza's Whereabouts Still Unknown

The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2016 01:22 PM
  • Abducted Indian Woman Judith D'Souza's Whereabouts Still Unknown
Afghanistan and India on Saturday continued their efforts to secure the release of an abducted Indian woman aid worker but her whereabouts remain unknown.
 
Judith D'Souza, 40, working with Aga Khan Foundation, an NGO, was kidnapped on Thursday night while she was returning home after a dinner at a friend's place in the Qala-e-Fatullah area of Kabul.
 
No group has claimed responsibility for the abduction but it is feared that she may have been kidnapped by a criminal gang in Kabul motivated by ransom, according to Afghan officials. 
 
Abductions for ransom in Afghanistan are common and criminal gangs have made millions of dollars from kidnapping foreign nationals.
 
Such crimes by criminal cartels raise fears that hostages may be sold to Islamists who complicate their freedom by raising demands for ransom as well as for securing the release of jailed terrorists.
 
But the Indian authorities are not ruling out the kidnapping of the Indian aid worker by the Taliban or its allied fighters. 
 
They said there was no fresh update about D'Souza but efforts were on to secure her release.
 
 
Her worried family in Kolkata said they have been in touch with the authorities in India and Afghanistan.
 
"As of now efforts are being made at various levels within the governments of India and Afghanistan," her brother Jerome D'Souza tweeted.
 
Afghan media reports said the government had left all channels of communication open to hear from suspected kidnappers but did not provide details.
 
"Afghan officials have said they are doing everything possible to secure the early release of the woman," TOLO News reported.
 
Sympathizers and well-wishers have appealed to the governments of both countries on social media networking pages for Judith's swift and safe release with #bringbackjudith.
 
An online petition was also launched at change.org for the release of the "Indian development worker... who went (to Afghanistan) to serve humanity.
 
"Abducting such people is not only inhumane but also anti-Islamic. We, on behalf of development workers, appeal to the abductors to realise the agony and trauma of her parents and family and set Judith free unharmed at the earliest," said the petition, garnering hundreds of signatures till late Saturday.
 
"We also request the local community and authority in Afghanistan and government of India to make all-out efforts to rescue Judith unharmed from the clutches of the abductors."
 
Judith D'Souza, an expert on gender issues, has been working for the Aga Khan Foundation since last year and was due to return home in Kolkata soon.

MORE India ARTICLES

Varun Gandhi's Immature Offering Butchers Poetry

Varun Gandhi's Immature Offering Butchers Poetry
If there is something that really stands out in this book, it has to be the images, contributed by different photographers, to complement the poems. 

Varun Gandhi's Immature Offering Butchers Poetry

Student Visa Day Attracts Over 4,000 At US Missions

Student Visa Day Attracts Over 4,000 At US Missions
Over 4,000 Indian students who had applied for visas to pursue education in the United States were interviewed at various US missions across India on the occasion of its annual Student Visa Day, an official said here on Thursday.

Student Visa Day Attracts Over 4,000 At US Missions

A Doctor's 'Jihad' To Popularize Birth Control Among Assam's Muslims

A Doctor's 'Jihad' To Popularize Birth Control Among Assam's Muslims
Now, Muslim males with two or more children are voluntarily coming out in large numbers to get sterilized and help control the population.

A Doctor's 'Jihad' To Popularize Birth Control Among Assam's Muslims

Millionaire Indian-Origin British Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Goes Missing In Punjab

Millionaire Indian-Origin British Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Goes Missing In Punjab
Punjab Police have booked a UK-based NRI for the mysterious disappearance of a British hotelier of Indian origin Ranjit Singh Power, who has been missing from the state since May 7, an official said on Wednesday.

Millionaire Indian-Origin British Hotelier Ranjit Singh Power Goes Missing In Punjab

India Boils As Mercury Travels North; More Than 500 Killed

India Boils As Mercury Travels North; More Than 500 Killed
India continued to reel under heatwave conditions on Monday with the day-temperature soaring to 47 degrees Celsius in Maharashtra's Chandrapur.

India Boils As Mercury Travels North; More Than 500 Killed

End Of 'Bure Din' In One Year: Prime Minister Narendra Modi

End Of 'Bure Din' In One Year: Prime Minister Narendra Modi
Asserting that his government has delivered the promised "achche din" (good days) to the people, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday that the promise was not for those who looted the nation.

End Of 'Bure Din' In One Year: Prime Minister Narendra Modi