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IRAQ WARS
In Iraq's Mosul, women desperate for news of 'disappeared'
By Mohammad Salim
Mosul, Iraq (AFP) June 13, 2018

Iraq's Sadr announces alliance with pro-Iranian Ameri
Baghdad (AFP) June 12, 2018 - Nationalist cleric Moqtada Sadr announced on Tuesday a surprise political alliance with pro-Iranian Hadi al-Ameri in a bid to lead Iraq over the next four years.

The two blocs won first and second place in the war-scarred country's May 12 parliamentary election.

The move by Sadr, who is staunchly opposed to Iranian involvement in the country, was unexpected by much of the political class as he had suggested unwillingness to work with Ameri and his bloc of pro-Iranian former fighters.

But at a joint press conference with Ameri in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, Sadr hailed the formation of "a true alliance to accelerate the formation of a national government away from any dogmatism".

Confusion has gripped Iraq since Sadr's electoral alliance with communists won the vote. Last week Iraq's parliament ordered a manual vote recount and sacked the commission which oversaw the polls amid mounting claims of electoral fraud.

"This is a call to all those who care about national interests... we will set up committees to discuss with all ways to accelerate the drafting of a government program," said Ameri, whose group played a key role last year in the defeat of the Islamic State group.

The May election saw a record number of abstentions as many Iraqis snubbed the corruption-tainted elite that had dominated the country since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

Many of Iraq's longtime political figures -- seemingly irremovable since the dictator's fall -- were pushed out of their seats by new faces.

Sadr, a former militia leader who led two uprisings against the US-led invasion of Iraq, has called for his country to be more independent from both Iran and the US.

By forming a coalition with Ameri, Sadr moves a step closer to getting enough seats to generate a majority in the 329 seat parliament.

Every Friday since Mosul was prised from the Islamic State group's clutches last July, women gather in the Iraqi city's Al-Minassa Square, desperate to learn the fate of husbands and sons.

Dressed in black, with children in tow and brandishing photos, some fear their men have fallen victim to a cruel double jeopardy.

They had been imprisoned by or forced to work for IS, only for Iraqi forces to suspect them of collaborating voluntarily with the jihadists -- and lock them up.

That is what some mothers and wives fear, faced with official silence.

"Instead of being free today and compensated, they are being kept behind bars," said 80-year-old Umm Abdullah, tormented by her son's disappearance.

She fears her child will be falsely accused, 12 months since Iraqi forces expelled IS.

When the jihadists seized Mosul in 2014 after a lightning offensive, men working in the security forces or in other state jobs who did not run away were left with nowhere to hide.

Seen as representatives of an "apostate" state, many of them were forced to publicly repent and swear allegiance to IS.

The women of Al-Minassa resemble the Mothers of the 'Plaza de Mayo' who relentlessly pursued justice for sons who vanished under Argentina's 1976 to 1983 junta.

- 'Sure they are detained' -

Standing on the steps of the square, 38-year-old housewife Shaima believes she knows what happened to her policeman husband.

Shaima, 38, said jihadists raided the family home and abducted her husband on November 25, 2016, a fate that befell many of his colleagues.

When Iraqi troops battled to retake the city, "he was used with other prisoners as human shields", she said.

Soldiers then arrested him "because he didn't have identity papers and had grown a thick beard during his detention by IS", said the mother of six, fighting back tears.

When outgoing prime minister Haider al-Abadi visited Mosul in March, the women tried to approach him and ask about their men, but bodyguards pushed them back.

Security officials told AFP the families of all those arrested in Mosul have been informed.

But Shaima said she has had no official word and resorted to other channels. She had "received information... he is detained" at Baghdad's Al-Muthana airport, along with suspected terrorists.

Abu Luay, a 56-year-old unemployed man, spends his time looking for his two sons, snatched from their home by IS fighters on October 4, 2016.

The sons, Luay and Qusay, have never reappeared.

After several months of investigating, "we're sure they're detained by security forces, but we don't know why", Abu Luay said.

- Thrown In 'Abyss' -

Not all those who had been held by IS survived the brutality of its rule.

"Many of the disappeared were executed by IS and their bodies thrown in the 'Khafsa'," said human rights activist Sami Faisal, referring to an area that translates from Arabic as the "abyss".

The site, a sinkhole that folklore says was left by a meteor, could be one of the biggest mass graves in Iraq, as it was an IS execution ground.

Collating testimony from families, Faisal said he has compiled 1,820 names of men and women who have disappeared.

Many on the list were soldiers, civil servants, journalists and activists from Mosul and the surrounding area.

A separate list of missing Yazidis comprises 3,111 names, although the number fluctuates as members of the minority re-emerge alive after having years enslaved by IS.

Deciding when a person can be declared dead is an issue which the authorities are tackling.

The Iraqi judiciary has ruled "two years without news of a person who has disappeared in a context of terrorism sufficient to officially pronounce their death".

Mosul's mayor, Zoheir al-Araji, said the justice ministry registers complaints by relatives of the disappeared.

The cases go "to the government and security authorities to investigate their fate", he said. "But so far without results."

Bereft of her two sons, Umm Luay tries to take some solace from photos and memories.


Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century


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Police among four arrested after Iraq ballot fire
Baghdad (AFP) June 11, 2018
Iraq on Monday arrested three police officers and an electoral commission employee after a fire that ravaged a warehouse where votes from May's legislative election were stored, authorities said. The prosecutor's office in Al-Russafa, a district of eastern Baghdad, "arrested four people suspected of involvement in the arson attack on the electoral commission", Supreme Judicial Council spokesman Abdel Sattar Bayraqdar said in a statement. "Three of them are police officers and the other is an emp ... read more

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