Iraq | ||
Detaining families of ISIS members is unlawful, says HRW | ||
2019-05-09 | ||
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The report quoted Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch saying, "The Iraqi government proposal to confine alleged families of ISIS members not only violates international law but is also contrary to the government’s stated aim of reconciling populations post-ISIS." She also added, "Detaining families not accused of any crimes is a form of collective punishment that will fuel resentment and put the lives of thousands of people on endless hold." Furthermore, the HRW stated that in a meeting on April 7, the committee’s president, Dr. Mohammed Salman al-Saadi, shared the plan’s draft it, and he said that it would affect all spouses, children, siblings, and parents of alleged ISIS members, whether the member is dead, disappeared, or in detention. Human Rights Watch raised its concerns with the proposal in letters to Abdul-Mahdi and President Barham Salih last Month. It also pointed out that al-Saadi said that the Ministry of Immigration will build compounds outside the cities to accommodate the families of ISIS, while indicated that the families who will be detained there will be allowed to leave only in certain circumstances, such as going to the hospital or to courthouse. He also mentioned that the "Sunni Endowment" will participate in this plan through the provision of mandatory programs to end extremism, while added that the Iraqi forces will guard these compounds. | ||
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Iraq |
Kirkuk combat chronicle: 2 bombs kaboom 3 innocents and 2 cops |
2018-08-16 |
![]() Bomb explosion leaves three civilians dead, injured in Kirkuk Kirkuk (IraqiNews.com) – An Iraqi civilian was killed and two others were wounded in a bomb attack in southern Kirkuk, a security source was quoted as saying. “An explosive charge targeted a vehicle in al-Wasti district in southern Kirkuk, leaving an employee of the Sunni Endowment Diwan killed,” the source told the Baghdad Post website. According to the source, the explosion left two other civilians wounded. No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Islamic State (IS) militant group, in most cases, is responsible for attacks targeting crowded areas, including markets, cafes and mosques across Iraq. Two Iraqi policemen dead as bomb explosion targets police patrol in Kirkuk Kirkuk (IraqiNews.com) – Two Iraqi policemen were killed after a bomb exploded while they were inspecting the security situation in Kirkuk, security sources were quoted as saying. “A bomb exploded today while a police vehicle was on patrol in al-Rashad district, south of Kirkuk,” the sources told Al-Watan Newspaper Wednesday. According to the sources, the explosion left two security personnel dead. No group claimed responsibility for the attack. |
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Iraq |
Mosul clearance continues: tortured imam, mayor stunned, 4 cops killed, 20 turbans bound |
2018-03-21 |
![]() Iraqi army officer interrogated for fatal torture of Mosul imam Mosul (IraqiNews.com) The Iraqi army command in Nineveh province is interrogating an officer for torturing a mosque’s imam in the city of Mosul to death, a senior commander was quoted saying. BasNews quoted Maj. Gen. Najm al-Jubouri, Nineveh Operations commander, saying Tuesday that an officer from the 20th division tortured to death an imam from Mosul’s al-Islah al-Zeraee “in a way that violated the military code and human rights”. According to Jubouri, “the officer has been remanded into custody preparing for his referral to a military trial after pleadings from the deceased’s relatives”. He did not mention the reason of the officer’s conduct, but Abu Bakr Kanaan, head of the Sunni Endowment Diwan in Nineveh, told Anadolu Agency on Monday that the imam declared through the mosque’s loudspeakers traffic instructions dictated by a security force assigned to a neighboring district, which presumably enraged the officer and prompted him to arrest and brutally beat the preacher to death. Since it launched an offensive to retake areas occupied by Islamic State militants since 2014, Iraqi forces, especially the Shia Popular Mobilization Forces, faced accusations from local and international rights groups that they committed human rights violations against civilians of the opposite religious sects at areas recaptured from the militants, especially in Nineveh. The government has repeatedly rebuffed the accusations and reiterated it ensures to investigate any breaches. Mayor wounded in stun grenade blast in Mosul: Source Mosul (IraqiNews.com) A mayor of a residential region was wounded as a stun grenade exploded in west of Mosul, a security source was quoted saying on Tuesday. Speaking to Alghad Press, the source said, “mayor of al-Bakr district was visiting mayor of al-Ta’meem district, when a stun grenade went off, leaving him injured.” “The injured was taken to hospital for treatment, while security troops conducted investigations,” the source added. Four policemen killed, twenty IS State members arrested in Mosul Mosul (IraqiNews.com) Four policemen, including an officer, were killed in an attack launched by Islamic State members, south of Mosul, an Iraqi security source from Nineveh said on Tuesday. Speaking to DPA, the source said, “security troops invaded al-Shura region, 20 kilometers south of Mosul, in the wake of attack launched by IS members that left a police officer and three policemen killed. In related news, Maj.Gen. Hamad Names al-Jabouri, commander of Nineveh Police, announced arrested twenty IS members in an operation in western Mosul. In a statement, Jabouri said “Nineveh police managed today, during an operation, to arrest 20 IS members in Souq al-Maash region, west of Mosul.” |
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Terror Networks |
The Beatings Will Continue: Iraqi Edition |
2017-01-10 |
![]() 2 die in ISIS gunfire in Mosul Nineveh (IraqiNews.com) An infant was killed and his mother was wounded as Islamic State militants shot at families leaving the field of battles between the extremist group and government forces in southeastern Mosul. A local source told Alsumaria News IS fighters shot at families leaving the districts of Sumer and Wahda, adding that the families had pleaded for security forces protection from the group. Islamic State fighters have used to target civilians fleeing battles between the group and security forces which have been leading a U.S.-backed campaign since October to retake the city which the group occupied in 2014. The group has used to post videos of executions of civilians who failed to abide by its extreme religious views. Hundred thousands of Iraqis are still stranded in the city, with militants using them as human shields, according to aid groups and news reports. Iraqi military officials have admitted that the existence of civilians had slowed down the pace of the first phase of operations which ended December 10th. Battles in the city forced at least 160.000 Iraqis to flee homes to refugee camps. The United Nations had voiced fears that battles could displace at least one million civilians from the city. ISIS freaks out when an Iraqi flag hoisted in Kirkuk Kirkuk (IraqiNews.com) The Islamic State has raised alarm among its members on Monday to search for unknown individuals who erected an Iraqi flag in central Hawija, southeast of Kirkuk. A local source told Alsumaria News that the erection of the Iraqi flag is understandably a provocative action for IS militants who had prohibited the possession of the flag among locals. Earlier on Monday, a security source told Alsumaria News that four IS militants were killed in an armed ambush that targeted their vehicle while passing through the Hawija, Abbasi road Islamic State militants have occupied Hawija, al-Riyadh, Abbasi and al-Zab, all southwest of Kirkuk, since 2014, when the group emerged to the scene to proclaim a self-styled “Islamic Caliphate”. The group’s extremist rule and abuses against civilians have forced hundreds to flee Hawija since then. Iraqi government forces, backed by a US-led military coalition and popular militias, are currently carrying out major campaigns to liberate Iraqi cities from the militants, most notably Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city and IS’s formerly-proclaimed “capital”. Out with the old using Semtex as ISIS destroys 100 shrines in Mosul Nineveh (IraqiNews.com) Representative of Sunni Endowment Diwan in Kurdistan announced on Monday, that the self-proclaimed Islamic State group destroyed nearly 100 religious places, including churches and Yazidi shrines in Nineveh Plain. Meriwan al-Naqshabandi, Representative of Sunni Endowment Diwan in Kurdistan, said in a statement, “The Islamic State group destroyed and destructed nearly 100 religious shrines, since imposing its control on villages and cities of Iraqi Kurdistan.” “The majority of these places belong to Christianity, Yazdanism and Yarsanism (Kaka’i),” Naqshabandi added. Naqshabandi also declared that all crimes committed by the Islamic State are documented by the concerned committee. He also pointed out that the committee is now documenting and following the situations of women and girls freed from the extremist group. “The majority of cases were transferred to two IDP camps in Dohuk Province, where liberated women are psychologically and physically rehabilitated, in cooperation with global organizations,” Naqshabandi explained. The Kurdistan Regional Government formed a committee consists of Sunni Endowment Diwan, Ministry of Peshmerga Affairs, Ministry of Interior Affairs and Ministry of Culture, in order to document crimes committed by the Islamic state in Kurdistan Region. |
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Iraq |
Mosul and Ninevah Province Mazurkas |
2015-03-29 |
ISIL force shop owners in Nineveh to pay rents [IraqiNews.com] The terrorist ISIL organization forced the owners of the shops possessed by the Sunni Endowment to pay rents for the organization. Reliable source from Nineveh told IraqiNews.com "The terrorist ISIL organization ordered the owners of the shops to pay rents for the terrorist organization starting from next April." "The terrorist organization instructed the owners of the shops who would not pay the rents to evacuate their shops within ten days," the source added. Gunmen assassinate ISIL combat leader in Mosul [IraqiNews.com] Unidentified gunnies assassinated some elements from the terrorist ISIL organization in djinn-infested Mosul ... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn... city, the center of Nineveh province. Reliable source told IraqiNews.com "Unidentified gunnies attacked with light weapons on Saturday morning the commander of the rockets regiment at the ISIL organization who is known as (Saeed Hamid) AKA (Abi Abdullah) in Filisteen neighborhood in Mosul city, killing him immediately with his driver and two other guards." |
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Iraq |
Special security force arrests 4 accused of assassinating Sunni clerics in Basra |
2015-01-09 |
[Iraq News] On Thursday, a security source in Basra province announced that a special security force of the Interior Ministry tossed in the clinkBook 'im, Mahmoud! four employees of the Sunni Endowment on suspicion of involvement in the liquidation of four holy mans working in the endowment last week. The source said in an interview for IraqiNews.com "A special security force of the Interior Ministry arrested four employees in the Directorate of Sunni Endowment in the south, including two security guards, as a result of suspicion of involvement in the liquidation of four holy mans in the district of al-Zubayr last Thursday," noting that, "The defendants were arrested during their stay within the Directorate, which is located in Tihsinia area." The source, who requested anonymity, added, "They are now under investigation in one of the security centers to find their connection with the crime," adding that, "Security information led to the issuance of judicial arrest warrants against the accused." |
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Iraq | |
ISIL to detonate 10 historical mosques in Mosul | |
2015-01-07 | |
[IraqiNews.com] The ISIL hard boyz are preparing for detonating 10 historical mosques in djinn-infested Mosul ... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn... The head of the Sunni Endowment in Nineveh, Abu Bakri Kan?an stated to IraqiNews.com ?The ISIL hard boyz announced its intention to detonate 10 historical mosques in Mosul and execute the people inside them because, as they stated, the mosques violate their traditions and rituals.?
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Iraq |
Sunni Endowment requests a fatwa to ban insulting Prophet's companions and family |
2015-01-04 |
[Iraq News] On Saturday, President of Sunni Endowment , Mahmoud Sumaidaie asked religious authorities and scholars to issue a clear fatwa to ban insulting the companions and the family of Prophet Muhammed, while called the Parliament for a legislation to criminalize it. Sumaidaie said, in his speech during the celebration of the Sunni Endowment week on the occasion of the Prophet?s birthday followed by IraqiNews.com, "I ask esteemed scholars to issue a clear fatwa about the sanctity of insulting the companions and the family the Prophet Muhammed." On December 26, 2014, Sheikh of Al-Azhar Ahmed al-Tayeb called religious leaders in Iraq and Iran to issue an explicit fatwa to ban insulting companions and mothers of believers and Sunnis icons. |
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Iraq |
Sunni mosque attacks on rise in Iraq |
2013-05-15 |
A sharp rise in attacks on Sunni holy sites in Iraq is feeding fears that the country could spiral into a new round of sectarian violence similar to the bloodletting that brought Iraq to its knees in 2006 and 2007. Majority Shiites control the levers of power in post-Saddam Hussein Iraq. Wishing to rebuild the nation rather than revert to open warfare, they have largely restrained their militias over the past five years or so as Sunni extremist groups such as Al-Qaida have targeted them with occasional large-scale attacks. That may now have changed. If it turns out that Iranian-backed Shiite militias are responsible for the recent attacks on Sunnis, it could signal a turn toward cyclical retaliatory violence. At least 29 Sunni mosques were attacked between mid-April and early May, according to Mahmoud al-Sumaidaie, the deputy head of Iraq's Sunni Endowment, which oversees the sect's holy sites. At least 65 Sunni worshippers were killed, according to a tally compiled from police reports. By contrast, two Shiite mosques were hit in bombings that killed one person over the same period, police and hospital officials said. Dozens of Shiites were killed in attacks by Sunni extremists at places other than holy sites during this time. In all of 2012, there were only 10 recorded attacks on Sunni holy sites, Sumaidaie said. |
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Iraq |
29 dead in suicide bomb attack in Iraq mosque: Officials |
2011-08-29 |
![]() ...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate... 's largest Sunni mosque Sunday night, killing 29 people during prayers, a shocking strike on a place of worship similar to the one that brought Iraq to the brink of civil war five years ago. Iraqi security officials said parliament politician Khalid al-Fahdawi, a Sunni, was among the dead in the 9:40 p.m attack. Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, a front man for Storied Baghdad's military operations command, confirmed the bombing happened inside the Um al-Qura mosque during prayers in the western Storied Baghdad neighborhood of al-Jamiaah. The blue-domed building is the largest Sunni mosque in Storied Baghdad. Two security officials and medics at two Storied Baghdad hospitals put the casualty toll at 29 dead and 38 maimed. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information. Al-Moussawi put the corpse count at only six and said there was no significant damage to the mosque. Conflicting corpse counts are common immediately after attacks in Iraq. In a statement early Monday, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on Iraqis to stand strong against gun-hung tough guys and "pursue them wherever they are." "Solidarity and unity, and standing as one line behind the army and the police, are the only way to eliminate this danger, which does not differentiate between the Iraqis and targets all of us," al-Maliki said. No group immediately grabbed credit for Sunday's bombing, but suicide kabooms generally are a hallmark of al-Qaeda, which is dominated by Sunnis. Intelligence officials have speculated that al-Qaeda will do almost anything to re-ignite sectarian violence, but the group recently had focused on attacking Iraqi security forces and the government to prove how unstable Iraq remains. "I heard something like a very severe wind storm, with smoke and darkness, and shots by the guards," said a shaken Mohammad Mustafa, who was inside the mosque and was hit in the hand by shrapnel. "How could this occur?" he said. "Is al-Qaeda able to carry out their acts against worshippers? How did this breach happen?" That the bomber detonated his explosives vest inside the mosque is particularly alarming, as it is reminiscent of a 2006 attack on a Shiite shrine in the Sunni city of Samarra that fueled widespread sectarian violence and nearly ignited a nationwide civil war. In that strike, Sunni gunnies planted bombs around the Samarra shrine, destroying its signature gold dome and badly damaging the rest of the structure. The attack hit Sunnis who were praying in a special service during the holy Mohammedan month of Ramadan, which ends Tuesday. It demonstrates anew that security measures to protect Iraqis as U.S. forces prepare to leave remain riddled with gaps, and shows the extent to which gunnies want to extend violence even as the eight-year- U.S. presence winds down. The mosque's security is provided by the government-supported Sunni Endowment, and al-Moussawi raised the possibility that the bomber had inside help. "For sure there must have been someone inside the mosque who helped the bomber," al-Moussawi said. "It must have been someone who is protecting the mosque." Sheik Ahmed Abdul Gafur al-Samarraie, the head of Sunni Endowment, agreed that was a possibility and said the group would investigate how the bomber got inside the mosque, where an estimated 200 people were praying. He said this is the first time such a security breach had occurred, and said guards did not suspect the bomber because he had a broken hand that was bandaged. Al-Samarraie said the bomber went kaboom!just a few feet (meters) from him, and called himself the likely target. He blamed al-Qaeda. "Those people are infidels and unbelievers, and their criminal acts will never deflect us from our unity," al-Samarraie told Iraqi state TV. "We will remain as unified Iraqis." He described "a deep sorrow for the murder of a child who was praying today. The blast tore his body to pieces: his legs in one place and a hand in another." Al-Fahdawi, the Sunni politician, was targeted twice by al-Qaeda, in 2004 and 2005, when he was the head of Sunni Endowment in Anbar province. The strike happened hours after the U.N.'s outgoing top diplomat in Iraq said the government in Storied Baghdad must determine whether its security forces are strong enough to thwart violence before requiring U.S. troops to leave at the end of the year. In his last interview after two years in Storied Baghdad, U.N. envoy Ad Melkert said Iraqi security forces have made "clear improvements" but declined to say if he thinks they are ready to protect the country without help from the American military. "It's up to the government, really, to assess if it is enough to deal with the risks that are still around," Melkert said in a wide-ranging interview with The News Agency that Dare Not be Named on the eve of his departure Monday. "Obviously, security remains a very important issue." |
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Arabia |
Bahrain renews ban on mosque loudspeakers |
2010-08-15 |
![]() The decision was made by the Bahraini Sunni Endowment Department (Awqaf) of the Ministry of Islamic Affairs , which said that the blaring loudspeakers in mosques should not be used for anything other than the traditional Muslim call to prayer. The religious authorities used SMS text messaging to instruct all callers to prayer, known as Muezzins, to respect the ban, but said the move is merely a regulatory one and an offense is only made if a complaint received. "Prayers are between a person and Allah, and there is no need to make one's prayers heard by people walking in the streets and in markets," said Mohammed Ali al-Sitri , the King's Advisor for Legislative Authority Affairs. Former Member of Parliament Hamad al-Mahindi opposed the ban saying, "There should be a manifestation of God's rituals during the holy month of Ramadan." "There are people that want to hear the prayers through the loudspeaker," al-Mahindi added. |
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Iraq | |
3 wanted men arrested for attempted murder of cleric | |
2010-06-12 | |
WASSIT / Aswat al-Iraq: Wassit's Quick Response Department personnel arrested three wanted men in the northern part of the province on charges of attempting to murder a cleric and his two sons, a local security source said on Friday.
"The warranted apprehensions took place upon intelligence tip-offs. Initial investigations with the three arrested persons proved their involvement in the armed operation on Sheikh Shujairi," the source added. Wassit province lies 180 km southeast of the Iraqi capital Baghdad. | |
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