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In Iraq, Salomi was employed as a linguist for the American troops, according to U.S. military spokesman Capt. Jay Ostrich in Baghdad. Muna Salomi, who is seeking a kidney donor while on dialysis, said her husband called her three times a day from Iraq to check on her and kept her spirits high. "He never missed one day," she said on Saturday night outside a family business, a supermarket in the heart of San Diego's Barrio Logan, a heavily Latino neighborhood. The family also owns liquor store in San Diego and houses in San Diego and suburban El Cajon, home to a large community of Iraqi expatriates. Their Iraqi-born sons
-- ages 21 through 27 -- live in California. The family said it never knew the nature of his work in Iraq but that he was dedicated to his job. "He felt like America has been so good to him, he felt it was his time to help America," said Vivian Tilley, a niece. "I guess you could say he's returning the favor." The sequence of events in Salomi's release was similar to the release of British computer consultant Peter Moore, whom the group freed in December. He had been abducted in May 2007 along with his four British bodyguards, three of whom were killed and the fourth is believed dead. Moore's release coincided with the transfer of the Shiite militants' leader from U.S. to Iraqi custody and his release a few days later. Asaib Ahl al-Haq is one of many groups the Iraqi government was working with as part of the reconciliation process designed to reduce violence.
[Associated
Press;
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