Some, like Gurpinder Kaur, refused to believe that her younger brother had been killed.
"I watched it on TV... This is absolutely shocking because my sources say they are alive. Without letting us know today, you informed the world that they are dead. The news has been on for two hours but we are yet to be informed," said Gurpinder Kaur. Her brother Manjinder Singh was among the Indians captured in Mosul.
"For past four years, the minister had told me that they were alive, I don't know what to believe anymore."
Ms Kaur refused to react saying she wanted to see proof for herself. "I am waiting to speak with her, no information was given to us, we heard her statement in parliament," she said.
In July last year, the government had said it would presume that the Indians were alive until proof indicated otherwise.
"Declaring anyone dead without proof is a sin and I won't commit a sin," Sushma Swaraj said in the Lok Sabha, responding to allegations that she was "misleading the house" on whether the Indians were alive.
Ms Kaur questioned, "If they say they have recovered the bodies, then why did they deny the information earlier?
The minister told the Rajya Sabha that remains of 30 bodies found underneath a mass grave, with distinctive features like long hair, IDs and non-Iraqi shoes. These were tracked down with a deep penetration satellite and the remains were taken to Baghdad for DNA testing.
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"They took our DNA in November," said Ms Kaur.The remains will be brought back in eight or 10 days, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs VK Singh said.