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Story Highlights• Gunmen seize deputy health minister from home Sunday evening• Syria's foreign minister, in Baghdad, urges troop withdrawal • Three car bombs at Baghdad bus station kill 10, wound 45 • Three arrested in attack on day laborers that killed 19, wounded 49 Adjust font size:
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- At least 24 gunmen -- some dressed as national police -- stormed the house of Iraq's deputy health minister, Ammar al-Saffar, on Sunday and abducted him, a Baghdad emergency police official told CNN. The kidnapping came as U.S.-led coalition and Iraqi forces continued searching for five Western security contractors seized in southern Iraq Thursday, as well as hostages taken in a mass kidnapping at a Baghdad research institute earlier last week. The kidnapping of al-Saffar happened about 5:30 p.m. (9:30 a.m. ET) in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Adhamiya, a predominantly Sunni neighborhood, the official said. Al-Saffar, a Shiite Muslim, is a member of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's Dawa Party. In June 2004, gunmen opened fire on al-Saffar as he left home for work. He escaped unharmed. Also on Sunday, Syria's foreign minister traveled to Iraq, becoming the highest-ranking Syrian official to visit the country since the U.S.-led war began in 2003. "We believe that a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops from Iraq will help in reducing violence and preserving security," Foreign Minister Walid Moallem said at a news conference. Moallem, standing alongside Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, said Syria is "ready to submit all our support to Iraq to preserve Iraq unity both of its people and its land." U.S. officials have said insurgents and terrorists have infiltrated Iraq through Syria and brought in weapons from the Syrian border. Lying suicide bomber kills 19 day laborersMeanwhile, 19 Iraqi day laborers were killed and 49 wounded by a suicide bomber south of the capital Sunday morning, Hilla police said. The suicide bomber pretended to offer work to the laborers, then set off the blast after they gathered around his car. Hilla is about 60 miles south of Baghdad. "The ground was covered with the remains of people and blood, and survivors ran in all directions," Muhsin Hadi Alwan, one of the wounded laborers, told The Associated Press. "How will I feed the six members of my family when I return home without work and without money?" Alwan said. Two Egyptians and an Iraqi were arrested for direct involvement in the bomb attack, a police spokesman said. The suspects told police the suicide bomber was from Syria, police said. A U.S. soldier was killed by a roadside bomb in a southeast Baghdad neighborhood late Saturday, U.S. military officials said Sunday. The name of the soldier, assigned to the 89th Military Police Brigade, was not immediately released. The death brings the American military death toll since the 2003 invasion of Iraq to 2,866. In southeastern Baghdad's Mashtal neighborhood, three car bombs exploded in a bus station Sunday morning, killing at least 10 people and wounding 45, Baghdad police said. Search goes on for hostagesThe family of one of the missing American contractors released his name and photo to CNN late Saturday, but said they didn't want to make a public statement except to say they hope he is released. Jonathan Cote, 23, of Getzville, New York, is the second of the kidnapped contractors identified. He is a former U.S. soldier who served in Afghanistan with the Army's 82nd Airborne Division. On Friday, the name of another contractor was released. He is Paul Reuben, a former police officer from St. Louis Park, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis. (Full story) Of the three unidentified contractors, two are American and one is a 25-year-old former Austrian soldier, the Austrian Foreign Ministry said. The contractors are employees of Crescent Security Corp., which operates out of Kuwait. (Watch why private military contractors view their job as something worth dying for -- 7:26 An Iranian-run Arabic-language satellite news station, al-Alam, aired a video Saturday from a group claiming to have abducted the five at a fake checkpoint. The video showed a man wearing a white head scarf wrapped around his face but no evidence of the abductees or that the man's group, Islamic Mujahedeen Battalion, had them. During al-Alam's broadcast, the man's voice was inaudible, and the station's presenter said the video was from the group that claimed to have kidnapped the contractors and killed four other Americans. CNN is unable to independently verify the authenticity of the video. Security sources in the southern Iraqi city of Basra said little is known about the Islamic Mujahedeen Battalion, a Shiite group that surfaced about six months ago and has threatened to attack security companies passing through southern Iraq from Kuwait. The contractors were abducted after crossing Iraq's southern border from Kuwait on Thursday. (Watch what is known about the hostage-taking -- 1:41 Gunmen masquerading as Iraqi police used a bogus checkpoint to ambush the contractors, who were traveling in a convoy Thursday. Fourteen people were taken and nine truck drivers were later released. (More details) Gunmen posing as Iraqi police also were behind the mass kidnapping at the Baghdad research institute Tuesday. It is still not known exactly how many people were kidnapped from the Ministry of Higher Education building. Iraq's higher education minister, Abed Dhiyab al-Ajili, said about 70 had been freed by Wednesday night, and another 40 were still missing. CNN's Ingrid Formanek, Erin McLaughlin and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report. Copyright 2006 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report. ![]() Gunmen kidnapped Iraqi Deputy Health Minister Ammar al-Saffar from his home on Sunday. Browse/Search
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