Libya: Islamic State kidnaps 20 foreign medical workers in Sirte

Islamic State (IS) has kidnapped around 20 foreign medical workers from a Libyan hospital, according to a CNN report.

The workers were taken from the Ibn Sina Hospital in Sirte during an attack on the building.

The workers are mainly from the Philippines, with others from Ukraine, India and Serbia, according to a hospital official. CNN reports that a group of more than 30 gunmen attacked the hospital while a bus was waiting to take them to the capital, Tripoli.

The hospital workers had decided to leave the city because of the security situation there and the official said that Islamic State wanted them to stay because they were the only people able to treat its wounded fighters.

Sirte was the final stronghold of forces loyal to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, who was captured there in 2011 by Transitional National Council forces, beaten and shot to death.

IS, which murdered 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians in Libya last month, took control of the city last year. Libya's chaotic security situation has seen it disintegrate as a political unit since Gaddafi's defeat, with warring tribes and interest groups providing fertile ground for the success of IS there.

related articles
Pope Francis condemns ISIS beheadings: 'They were killed simply for the fact that they were Christians'

Pope Francis condemns ISIS beheadings: 'They were killed simply for the fact that they were Christians'

Videos showing Christians forgiving Islamic State spread through Middle East
Videos showing Christians forgiving Islamic State spread through Middle East

Videos showing Christians forgiving Islamic State spread through Middle East

News
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech

A church leader was apparently warned by a police officer that a Bible verse displayed on the back of his campervan could be considered "hate speech" in certain contexts.

Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading
Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading

After years of steady decline, Americans are rediscovering the Bible — and young adults are leading the way.

A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace
A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace

The danger we run into when we read the public reports of the misdeeds of some person who has become the object of public disgrace is that we become tempted to entertain the idea that we are somehow better in the eyes of God than that person

Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery
Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery

More than a fifth of the world's currently enslaved population are believed to live in India.