Britons 'among westerners seized in Baghdad'
The Foreign Office said it was "urgently" examining reports that four British security guards were among seven westerners kidnapped from a government building in Iraq today.
A spokeswoman said officials were "aware of reports that a group of westerners have been kidnapped" and were "urgently looking into them".
Gunmen wearing police uniforms abducted the group from a finance ministry building in Baghdad.
Police said the group were seized from cars outside the building. It is believed to be the first time westerners have been taken from a government location.
The bodyguards reportedly work for a Canadian security company, GardaWorld based in Montreal. A spokeswoman for the company said it was investigating reports that its staff were involved in today's incident.
"We are working together with our teams in Iraq to fully investigate, in accordance with our procedures, what has actually happened," she said.
The spokeswoman added that GardaWorld - which has hundreds of staff, mostly ex-military personnel, in Iraq - was involved in "risk mitigation" and security projects in the country.
"We have a number of British people working as teams of specialists throughout Iraq," she added.
The hostages are reported to include three German computer experts who had been giving a lecture to ministry personnel in the city centre building.
Led by a police major, the gunmen entered the conference room shouting: "Where are the foreigners, where are the foreigners?" a witness told Reuters.
Another lecturer escaped because he was sitting apart from his colleagues. The witness said the lecturers, employed by a US organisation, had given at least 12 lectures at the ministry over the past year.
The Pentagon has estimated that between 20,000 and 30,000 armed security contractors work in Iraq, although there are no official figures and some estimates are much higher.
More than 200 foreigners and thousands of Iraqis have been kidnapped since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. At least 60 foreign hostages, including the aid worker Margaret Hassan, are believed to have been executed by their captors.
Reports of the kidnappings come on another bloody day for Iraq, with two car bombings in Baghdad killing more than 35 people. At least 22 people died and 55 others wounded in a bomb explosion in a parked bus in the centre of the city, police said.
The blast happened near a major intersection in Tayaran Square, a busy commercial area usually filled with markets. Many day workers, mostly poor Shias, often wait in the square for work.
US military officials said eight soldiers were killed in two separate incidents in Diyala province, north of Baghdad.
Six soldiers died in explosions near their vehicles, and two were killed when their helicopter went down. It was not immediately known whether the aircraft was shot down or suffered mechanical difficulties.
guardian