
Two more of the British hostages held in Iraq are now thought "very likely" to be dead, the BBC has learned.
Security guards Alan McMenemy, from Glasgow, and Alec Maclachlan, from south Wales, were kidnapped in 2007 along with three other Britons.
The bodies of two of the other men were found last month with gunshot wounds.
The condition of the fifth man, Peter Moore, is not known, but the Foreign Office says all efforts are being made to secure his release.
Mr Moore had been working for American management consultancy Bearingpoint in Iraq, while the other men were security contractors employed to guard him.
The group were captured at Baghdad’s Ministry of Finance in May 2007 by about 40 men disguised as Iraqi policemen.
They are understood to belong to an obscure militia known as Islamic Shiite Resistance in Iraq.
Deal hopes
BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner said the Foreign Office last week told the families of Mr McMenemy and Mr Maclachlan that the men had most likely died while in captivity.
British officials are now focusing on IT consultant Mr Moore. The last proof of life sent by his kidnappers was a video handed over in March, but it is not known when the film was made or if he is still alive today.

The bodies of Mr Swindlehurst, from Skelmersdale, Lancashire, and Mr Creswell, from Glasgow, were flown back to the UK last month.
News of their deaths came shortly after speculation that a deal to free all five men alive could be close.
Security experts understood there had been positive diplomatic moves behind the scenes, including the release of a prisoner whose freedom was being demanded by the hostage-takers
Little is known about the captives because of a media blackout during a large period of their captivity.
The blackout originally came came on the instruction of the hostage-takers who said they did not want publicity.
This has been Britain’s longest running hostage crisis for nearly 20 years. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.





The Lib Dem power failure
The party controls swaths of urban Britain but lacks the leadership and vision our great cities require
With growing confidence, Nick Clegg is making his mark at Westminster. On Trident, on Afghanistan and, at yesterday’s prime minister’s questions, in condemning parliament’s inability to reform itself, the Liberal Democrat leader is asking the tough questions and hinting at a more radical and progressive political future.
But in power it’s a rather different story. For after last month’s victories in the local elections, Clegg’s party is now a major player in public life. In control of Bristol, Liverpool, Hull and Sheffield; part of a Tory coalition governing Birmingham and Leeds; and in charge of numerous London boroughs. The Lib Dems are dictating the shape of great swaths of urban Britain. And just then the confidence and bravery on show in SW1 appears to dissipate. All too often an insurgency party, built on grassroots campaigns about town hall excess and mending fences, lacks the political vision to govern our greatest cities.
All politics is local – an aphorism the Lib Dems have burned into their retina. When it comes to speed-bumps, cycle-paths, planning applications and all the miserable frustrations of suburban life, the party is there, making a difference. Organised, motivated, and effective, they pick up council seat after council seat where there is any whiff of one -party hubris.
But such a parochial focus inevitably causes political contradictions. As the London Green party leader Jenny Jones has deftly chronicled, Clegg’s troops are against roadbuilding – apart from the Newbury, Batheaston, and Lancaster bypasses. They are opposed to the expansion of Heathrow in south-west London, but in favour of the growth of Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool airports. And they are against incinerators – apart from when they are for them, in Exeter, Plymouth and Barnstaple.
One could see this as an admirable display of localism, with each regional party defining its policy agenda. Yet it might also hint at the woeful lack of a governing ideology, allowing the party to position itself as a perennial protest vote. Perhaps the Lib Dems are the party of liberty – but how does one explain their passion for CCTV cameras? Maybe it is the party of social justice, but not if it means free school meals in Hull or Islington.
In fact, amid all the campaigns and promises of action, the Lib Dem offer at local government usually boils down to the chance to throw the buggers out, maintain an inflation-linked council tax, and have the refuse collected regularly. Not one of those is an ignoble ambition for millions of residents. But when it comes to leading our cities, a grander civic sense is surely called for.
And here the Liberals have a proud history. It was Joseph Chamberlain‘s municipal socialism that transformed Birmingham in the 1870s, slicing Victoria Square and Corporation Street and Council House Square (later Victoria Square) through the fetid, medieval core of the city,by clearing 40 acres of slums and taking control of gas and water in the process. “Ward meetings assumed a new character,” recalled a contemporary. “They spoke of sweeping away streets in which it was not possible to live a healthy and decent life; of making the town cleaner, sweeter and brighter; of providing gardens and parks and music; of erecting baths and free libraries, an art gallery and a museum.” Chamberlain delivered these changes with the backing of a Liberal party unafraid to think big. Overriding local ward objections, Chamberlain “parked, paved, assized, marketed, Gas-and-Watered and improved Birmingham” – all within three years.
In the past decade, Britain’s cities have undergone similar urban renewal – in the sage words of Michael Heseltine, “the biggest investment and regeneration since the Victorian age”. Post-industrial conurbations have revitalised their city centres, begun to conserve their civic fabric, and attracted new residents and businesses (if not yet tackled the problems of schooling), all of which have necessitated taking risks with big capital projects such as trams and business parks, thinking strategically about the international brand of a city, and confronting vested interests.
Precisely such a policy has transformed Manchester under Sir Richard Leese’s leadership. Glasgow is heading in the same direction under Steven Purcell. Even Wandsworth council under Tory leader Edward Lister – philistine and reactionary as it is – has a sense of civic purpose. Yet you will look in vain for a similar spirit of urban ambition from many Lib Dem leaders, too often focused on the cracks in the pavement rather than the true measure of a metropolis. In Hull and Bristol it is too early to tell, but in Sheffield they are already undermining a global reputation for sporting excellence and, in Leeds, the council is putting that city’s creative regeneration at risk with cuts to the arts and voluntary sector.
Of course, there are many progressive Lib Dem councils: Richmond has pioneered a range of quality-of-life policies, while Liverpool has invested in a cultural strategy embracing the entire city. And, of course, the party plays an essential part in the ecology of democratic pluralism. But I know what a Tory council stands for, and I know what a Labour council does, but I have no idea what a Liberal town looks like – apart from boasting some well managed controlled parking zones.