Kot Addu police arrested four people in connection with last week’s kidnapping of two Western aid workers, local police officials said on Monday.
Gunmen stormed the workers’ residence on January 23 in the town located in Punjab province and drove away with the two aid workers — an Italian national and a German national. Punjab IG police Javed Iqbal said that the aid workers, who were working on a project in southern Punjab, are being held for ransom.
“That is all we can confirm, that they were abducted for ransom. At the moment, we cannot provide any more details or say anything about who is behind it,” Iqbal told reporters in Lahore.
“The four suspects were under observation since the kidnapping. We traced some calls back to them,” another police official said.
Criminal gangs often target foreign aid workers in Pakistan in hope of securing large ransoms for their release. Pakistani officials say militant groups such as the Taliban are also involved in kidnappings.
Gunmen kidnapped a British doctor, working with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), in the southwestern city of Quetta on January 5.
American aid worker Warren Weinstein was kidnapped from the central Pakistani city of Lahore in August last year. Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for Weinstein’s abduction in December. In July, a Swiss couple was kidnapped from the southwestern Baluchistan province by the Pakistani Taliban.