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Iraq
Central Bank of Iraq attacked 50 times last few days
2019-11-14
[THEBAGHDADPOST] The front man of the Commander-in-Chief of Iraqi Armed Forces, Major General Abdul Karim Khalaf, announced that the Central Bank of Iraq has been attacked by 50 groups in the past few days by unruly groups

Khalaf said during a presser that "some of the demonstrators disrupted traffic in the capital, and assaulted the coppers," noting that "the central bank building alone has been attacked by 50 uncontrolled groups diagnosed by security forces."

He explained, "All arrests are made only by judicial orders," noting that "violent perpetrators are very few," saying that "some of them today burned a school and thus will be the target of arrest and prosecution."
Related:
Abdul Karim Khalaf: 2009-06-18 Iraqi Arrested in Shooting of Lawmaker
Abdul Karim Khalaf: 2009-02-26 Iraq arrests Shiite police for attacks on Sunnis
Abdul Karim Khalaf: 2008-10-19 Clerics slam attacks on Mosul Christians
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Iraq
Iraqi Arrested in Shooting of Lawmaker
2009-06-18
BAGHDAD — Iraqi forces on Wednesday arrested a man suspected of being involved in last week’s assassination of a leading Sunni member of Parliament, Iraqi officials said.
Excellent and good job by the Iraqi forces.
Around 1 p.m., a quick-response force raided a house in the western Baghdad neighborhood of Ghazaliya, an area once controlled by Sunni insurgents, and detained a man described as “the mastermind” behind the killings of Harith al-Obaidi, the lawmaker, an aide and three bodyguards, said Brig. Gen. Nomon Dakhil Jawad, the commander of the force. General Jawad identified the suspect as Ahmed Abid Uwaid al-Luhaibi, a member of the Awakening, a government-backed Sunni paramilitary force. The general said Mr. Luhaibi was also an assistant commander in the Islamic State of Iraq, a Sunni jihadist group.

Maj. Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf, a spokesman for the Ministry of the Interior, confirmed the arrest but said it was too early to say what role Mr. Luhaibi might have played in the killing.

Mr. Obaidi, his aide and his bodyguards were shot at point-blank range in a mosque on Friday afternoon, shortly after Mr. Obaidi had given a sermon. Mr. Obaidi was the leader of the main Sunni bloc in Parliament, as well as a strong critic of human rights abuses in Iraqi prisons.

An officer on the government committee investigating the assassination, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak publicly, said Mr. Luhaibi was linked to the weapon used in the killings.
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Iraq
Iraq arrests Shiite police for attacks on Sunnis
2009-02-26
Iraqi authorities have arrested 11 Shiite police officers for alleged attacks against Sunnis, including the murder of Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's sister, a security official said on Tuesday.

The men are suspected of having killed or kidnapped a number of Sunnis at the height of the country's sectarian strife, said the official, who asked not to be named.

One of the Sunni Muslims killed by the gang of police officers in a wave of violence over several years was Maysoon al-Hashemi the sister of Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi, Interior Ministry spokesman Major-General Abdul Karim Khalaf said.

" They killed people in broad daylight, in front of everyone, and used police cars to commit their crimes "
Major-General Abdul Karim Khalaf
"They killed people in broad daylight, in front of everyone, and used police cars to commit their crimes," he said.

He said the four men had admitted murdering Hashemi, who headed the women's section of her brother's political movement, the Islamic Party, the country's main Sunni group.

A gang of 12 people including 11 policemen was "implicated in murders and kidnaps of a large number of people in Baghdad," the official said.

The arrest of one policeman for involvement in a kidnapping led to the capture of all members of the gang, the security official added.

"They have admitted killing shopkeepers in the al-Karkh neighborhood and killing others in Karrada while they were on patrol," he said, adding that most of the attacks took place at the end of 2006.

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Iraq
Clerics slam attacks on Mosul Christians
2008-10-19
Iraqi Sunni and Shia clerics have spoken out against a spate of deadly attacks on Christians in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

The recent series of killings, which has been widely blamed on al-Qaeda in Iraq, are said to be a result of the Christian community's stepped up lobbying efforts to ensure Christian representation in upcoming provincial elections.

Shia cleric Sadralddin al-Qubanji said Friday he disapproved of the attacks in "letter and spirit,'' adding that the violence represented a "malicious scheme against Christians and all Iraqis.''

Sunni cleric Abdul-Sattar Abdul-Jabar also called for respect for a religious group that has "coexisted with us since the emergence of Islam 1,400 years ago.''

Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf said last week that the Iraqi government is taking new measures to protect Mosul's Christians, including an increased police presence in their neighborhoods and more checkpoints and patrols near churches.

"We don't deny that hostile acts occurred, but we have the ability to stop such acts and the situation is under control,'' he said.

Iraq's parliament on September 24 approved a long-delayed provincial elections law that allows provincial elections to take place, but lawmakers scrapped a key clause, known as Article 50, that would have guaranteed seats for Christians and other minorities at the provincial level. In the Iraqi National Assembly they are guaranteed seats.

Christians have strongly opposed the decision to eliminate the article and the Iraqi government has asked parliament to restore the quotas.
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Iraq
Iraqi Police Now Number 300,000
2008-08-02
Iraq has nearly doubled its police force to nearly 300,000 officers.

The Iraqi Interior Ministry under Jawad Bolani said that more than 200,000 police officers were hired since 2006. The ministry said police have taken security responsibility in 10 provinces.

"These steps have not come without great sacrifice," Maj. Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf, the ministry's operations director, said. "We have had 10,000 police officers killed or injured trying to bring peace to our communities."
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Iraq
30,000 Iraqi troops to attack al-Qaeda in Diyala
2008-07-24
Around 30,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen are poised to launch a military assault in Diyala province, a bastion of al-Qaeda fighters, from August 1, army and police officers say. "The operation is aimed at cleansing the region of insurgents, al-Qaeda and militias who are still there," a senior Iraqi military officer told AFP.

He said around 30,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen from various parts of the country would take part in the crackdown in the central Iraq province starting on August 1.

Senior Iraqi police officials in Baquba, the capital of Diyala, confirmed the assault would start on August 1. "It will be an operation led by the Iraqi army. The US army will probably only watch ... If they need help, we'll help them. If not, we will not do anything," a US military officer said.

Iraq's interior ministry spokesman Major General Abdul Karim Khalaf announced on July 13 that the Iraqi military would launch an assault in Diyala but did not specify the date.

He said troops expected tough fighting during the assault.

Diyala and its capital Baquba are Iraq's most dangerous regions with insurgents regularly carrying out attacks, including by female suicide bombers.

The assault in Diyala follows similar Iraqi military operations in the southern provinces of Basra and Maysan, and the northern province of Nineveh.

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Iraq
Secret attack against Diyala insurgents set for August 1st: Iraqi Army
2008-07-23
BAQUBA, Iraq (AFP) - Some 30,000 Iraqi soldiers and police are to launch a military assault against Al-Qaeda fighters and insurgents in Diyala province from August 1, army and police officers said Wednesday.

"The operation is aimed at cleansing the region of insurgents, Al-Qaeda and militias who are still there," a senior Iraqi military officer told AFP. He said some 30,000 soldiers and policemen from across Iraq would take part in the crackdown in the central province starting August 1.

Senior Iraqi police officials in Baquba, the capital of Diyala, confirmed the assault would start on August 1. "It will be an operation led by the Iraqi army. The US army will probably only watch... If they need help, we'll help them. If not, we will not do anything," a US military officer said.

Iraq's interior ministry spokesman Major General Abdul Karim Khalaf announced on July 13 that the Iraqi military would launch an assault in Diyala but did not specify the date. He said troops expected tough fighting during the assault.

Diyala and its capital Baquba are Iraq's most dangerous regions with insurgents regularly carrying out attacks, including by female suicide bombers. The looming assault in Diyala follows similar Iraqi military operations in the southern provinces of Basra and Maysan, and the northern province of Nineveh.

Aided by the US military and Iraqi forces, local anti-Qaeda groups known as "Sahwa" or Awakening councils, have inflicted severe blows on Al-Qaeda but the extremist group continues to carry out attacks in the region.

"Yes. Diyala remains the most dangerous province in Iraq," said Colonel Ali al-Karkhi, commanding officer of Iraqi forces in Khan Beni Sad, a town near Baquba which has been torn apart by the violence. "But understand that it is a mini-Iraq. There are Sunnis, Shiites, Kurds, Christians," the colonel told AFP in an interview.

"The other provinces are far less mixed which is why it is so difficult to restore peace here. It is also the reason why people are so extremist," he said.

As in other parts of Iraq, the colonel said, the locals have grown weary of violence and massacres and want peace and reconstruction, particularly through economic development.

Diyala, fed by the Euphrates and Diyala rivers, was once the granary of Iraq and the country's orange capital with its lush orchards.

But "foreign countries have sown the disorder," lamented Colonel Karkhi, pointing a finger at Shiite Iran, which shares a border with Diyala. "We captured five people (Iraqis) who 45 days ago were in Iran for training. They receive instructions from the Iranian services and their business is to kill people," he said.

The US military claims that most of these militants are "rogue" members of the Shiite Mahdi Army militia, the militant wing of radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's movement.

Karkhi said the militants apart from receiving weapons, are paid three million dinars (2,400 dollars) monthly. "It is good money," he said. He said security forces usually display the names and photographs of wanted people at check-points. "The problem is that when we apply pressure they flee to Iran," Karkhi said.
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Iraq
AQI leader arrested, 3 security elements injured in Mosul
2008-05-28
(VOI) - Iraqi Interior Ministry’s forces arrested a senior leader of al-Qaeda group after armed clashes, during which three security elements were wounded in eastern Mosul, the ministry said on Tuesday. “The emergency forces clashed with al-Qaeda gunmen in al-Zuhour region in eastern Mosul, where Adel Ismail Ahmed, al-Qaeda leader, was arrested and three security elements were wounded,” General Abdul Karim Khalaf, the director of the national command center, told Aswat al-Iraq – Voices of Iraq – (VOI). He did not add more details. Earlier in May, the commander of Ninewa operations, Staff Lieutenant General Riyadh Jalal, announced the commencement of Operation Lion's Roar with the aim of tracking down al-Qaeda operatives. Five days later Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki launched another security campaign dubbed Um al-Rabieen with the same purpose.
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Iraq
Iraqi Army Reports Headway in Basra
2008-04-20
Iraqi soldiers took control of the last bastions of the cleric Moktada al-Sadr’s militia in Basra on Saturday, and Iran’s ambassador to Baghdad strongly endorsed the Iraqi government’s monthlong military operation against the fighters.

By Saturday evening, Basra was calm, but only after air and artillery strikes by American and British forces cleared the way for Iraqi troops to move into the Hayaniya district and other remaining Mahdi Army militia strongholds and begin house-to house searches, Iraqi officials said. Iraqi troops were meeting with little resistance, said Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf, the spokesman for the Iraqi Interior Ministry in Baghdad.

The developments followed a pattern that has been seen again and again in the Basra fighting, where Mr. Sadr’s Mahdi militia has battled Iraqi government troops to a standstill and then retreated. Why the fighters have adopted those tactics is unknown, but American military and civilian officials have repeatedly claimed that Mahdi units trained and equipped by Iran have played a major role in the unexpectedly strong resistance that government troops met in Basra.

Whether to counter those allegations or simply because, as many Iraqis have recently speculated, Mr. Sadr’s stock has recently fallen in Iranian eyes, the Iranian ambassador, Hassan Kazemi Qumi, on Saturday expressed his government’s strong support for the Iraqi assault on Basra. Even more strikingly, he called the militias in Basra “outlaws,” the same term that Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has used to describe them.

“The idea of the government in Basra was to fight outlaws,” Mr. Qumi said. “This was the right of the government and the responsibility of the government. And in my opinion the government was able to achieve a positive result in Basra.”

Strikingly, however, Ambassador Qumi simultaneously condemned American-led operations against the Mahdi Army in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City, where major new clashes broke out on Saturday. He said the American-backed fighting in that densely populated district was only causing civilian casualties rather than achieving any positive result.

“The American insistence on coming and having a siege on a couple of million people in one area and striking them with warplanes and shell them randomly — many innocent people will be killed through this operation,” Mr. Qumi said. “The result of this operation will be the sabotage and destruction of buildings, and many people will leave their homes.”

The apparent stand-down by Mr. Sadr’s armed supporters in Basra, in contrast to their continued fighting in Sadr City, renewed questions about where the Sadrist movement stands in Iraq’s unstable political landscape. While his supporters have often been spoilers, they also represent the poor and disenfranchised, who were battered under Saddam Hussein, making it difficult for the government to write them off.
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Iraq
Iraqi official says al-Qaeda in Iraq is penetrated, has become an open book
2008-01-12
(KUNA) -- The Interior Ministry announced Friday that al-Qaeda in Iraq has been successfully penetrated by means of a recently formed government security apparatus and is virtually an "open book," confirming that the sectarian sedition in the country was at the end of its rope.
Good to proclaim whether or not it's true. Keep playing with their heads ...
Major General Abdul Karim Khalaf, director of operations at the Interior Ministry, told KUNA here "we have succeeded in establishing a capable intelligence apparatus to penetrate the al-Qaeda organization in Iraq and all armed groups targeting Iraqi national security." He said emphatically that the sectarian sedition in Iraq has virtually ended, adding that the new intelligence apparatus is able to achieve its objectives regarding all armed groups operating in Iraq.

He went on to say that "al-Qaeda is now an open book for us, now that we have succeeded in penetrating it." Khalaf did not reveal the extent of al-Qaeda's reach in Iraq but asserted that trained Iraqi security elements currently operate under cover within this terrorist organization which he said will be dismantled soon.

Iraqi security forces had announced during the past 48 hours the arrest of the mastermind behind the second Samarra explosions and the killing of Abu Qataadah al-Saudi (who was one of the most prominent leaders of al-Qaeda in Iraq) in a military operation in south-west Samarra.

The joint Iraqi and American forces killed at the end of last month Abu Abdullah al-Zubai, who was the regional commander or "Prince" for al-Qaeda for the region extending from west of Baghdad to the east of Fallujah.

Meanwhile US fighter jets yesterday in coordination with Iraqi forces shelled about 50 strongholds of al-Qaeda in the Arab-Jabbour area south of the capital.

Last month the leader of al-Qaeda in southern Baghdad, known by the name of Muhammad Khalil al-Qargholi, was killed in air strikes coordinated by Iraqi security and US forces south of Baghdad.

In the same month a terrorist leader who went by the name of "Abu Maisara" was killed along with nine of his aides by joint US-Iraqi forces. The US army described him as an adviser to the terrorist leader al-Baghdadi (who also went by the name of Abu Ayyub al-Masri) and his predecessor the notorious Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
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Iraq
Iraq says most of Al-Qaeda network destroyed in 2007
2007-12-30
The Iraqi interior ministry lauded its achievements over the past year on Saturday, saying that 75 percent of Al-Qaeda's networks in the country had been destroyed in 12 months.

Ministry spokesman Abdul Karim Khalaf also outlined sharp falls in the numbers of assassinations, kidnappings and death squad murders. He told a news conference that increased patrols along the borders with Saudi Arabia and Syria had slowed infiltration by militants and played a key role in Iraq's improved security situation. "We have destroyed 75 percent of Al-Qaeda hide-outs, and we broke up major criminal networks that supported Al-Qaeda in Baghdad," he said. "After eliminating safe houses in Anbar province, which used to be Al-Qaeda's base, we moved into areas surrounding Baghdad and into Diyala province. Al-Qaeda headed north and we are pursuing them," he said.

Khalaf said kidnappings were down 70 percent and that an average of three to five people killed by death squads were being found each day in Baghdad compared with 15 to 20 a day in February.

Personnel with militant or criminal links had been weeded out from Iraqi security forces, he said, adding that Sunni-US alliances against Al-Qaeda had also significantly contributed to the drop in violence.
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Iraq
Merging militias in Iraq Security Forces
2007-12-11
While calls to merge militias with Security Forces and state institutions increase, the prior merge revealed a lot of gaps that shall be treated since it weakened the state’s institutions corrupted the same and brought about huge damages. Some of the biggest weak points of the merge issue according to an officer in Najaf Police Directorate was bringing in to police members who are unqualified on the military, functional and professional sides and the worst was that they are loyal to prominent parties.

In Najaf, dozens of Officers holding military degrees were shocked since a huge number of police officers that don’t hold any degree and that lack military knowledge were brought into the army. Hence, they became a burden that hinders the work of the army that is supposed to spread security in provinces where different political parties try to hold the sway of power and wealth. To that, those who are called “merge officers” in police and army caused a lot of disturbance among security forces.

According to the same source, Former Prime Minister merged 15 thousand militias’ and parties’ members in the police of Baghdad, and Middle and South Euphrates. These members don’t enjoy the physical fitness required to be a part of the army. Moreover, they didn’t know how to read or write and they were given a high rank. In the same context, MP Mokhles Al Zamili, coalition bloc member, said that some governmental, administrative and professional positions were for people who were outside Iraq and who came afterwards in order to take in their responsibilities.

On the other hand, Interior Ministry spokesman Abdul Karim Khalaf said that the ministry has an authentic database and those who doubt that these officers hold a degree can refer to this archive. He also called to stop throwing accusations without presenting proofs. Interior Ministry Spokesman added that were merged according to the decision of the local governor, US administrator in Baghdad, Paul Bremer were given low-ranks and other officers who were out of service for political reasons were given back their legal rights.
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