Question:

Top militant 'arrested in Iraq'

by Guest8857  |  12 years, 7 month(s) ago

0 LIKES UnLike

Top militant 'arrested in Iraq'

 Tags: arrested, Iraq, militant, top

   Report

1 ANSWERS

  1. revathi
    Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has said that a man arrested in Baghdad last week is a top figure in the al-Qaeda-related insurgency.

    Mr Maliki told the BBC Abu Omar al-Baghdadi had been tracked for more than two months by Iraqi security services.

    His arrest was reported last Thursday but the reports were not confirmed.

    Baghdadi is a nom de guerre for a shadowy figure thought to lead the Islamic State in Iraq, an umbrella group of radical Sunni factions.

    In an exclusive interview with the BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad, Mr Maliki disclosed that a purely Iraqi intelligence operation had tracked the wanted man's movements from the inside.

    Nom de guerre

    He had been identified by former close associates who had worked with him, and attended his inauguration as leader of the Islamic State in Iraq, which is affiliated to al-Qaeda in Iraq.

    Prime Minister Maliki said Mr Baghdadi was being interrogated, and that the results would be made public.

    Abu Omar al-Baghdadi is a shadowy figure - some American commanders have even cast doubt on his very existence, our correspondent says.

    The name is a nom de guerre - Iraqi officials say his real name is Ahmad al-Mjamei, though he has also been known under other names.

    With around 150 people killed in just two days this week, Iraqis are wondering whether the latest attacks herald a return to those black times.

    Nobody can be sure that they don't.

    But so far, they are a blip on the screen - a big blip, but not one that takes the country anywhere near back to the levels of violence prevailing two years ago.
    Read Jim's thoughts in full

    The capture or killing of other senior al-Qaeda or related leaders in the past has not on its own made a perceptible difference to the state of the insurgency, our correspondent adds.

    Protest

    The arrest of Baghdadi on Thursday came amid an upsurge of the violence in Iraq.

    About 150 were killed in just two days, sparking fears of a slide back into the bloody chaos that was a hallmark of Iraq following the US-led invasion.

    Meanwhile on Sunday, a woman was shot dead during a US raid on a house in the southern Iraqi town of Kut in which at least five people were arrested.

    The US military said she had been nearby during the operation, and had moved into the line of fire.

    But the death was condemned as a crime by the local provincial council, and hundreds of people gathered at the local morgue to protest, reported the Associated Press news agency.

Sign In or Sign Up now to answser this question!

Question Stats

Latest activity: 15 years ago.
This question has 1 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.