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Hashed al-Shaabi: controversial force on Iraq's front lines
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 10, 2017


Iraq holds military parade to celebrate victory over IS
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 10, 2017 - Iraq's armed forces held a military parade in Baghdad on Sunday to celebrate the victory announced by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi over the Islamic State group.

Abadi on Saturday declared victory in Iraq's three-year war to expel the jihadist group that at its height endangered the country's very existence.

Iraqi army units marched through the main square in central Baghdad as helicopters and fighter jets flew overhead, witnesses said.

The parade was not broadcast live and only state media were allowed to attend.

Abadi had declared Sunday a public holiday after making his announcement, in which he said Iraq had defeated the jihadists "through our unity and our determination".

Iraqis took to the streets to celebrate, including in second city Mosul and the capital, singing patriotic songs, waving the national flag and shouting "Iraq, Iraq!"

The Sunni extremists of IS seized control of large parts of Iraq and neighbouring Syria in 2014, declaring a cross-border "caliphate" and committing widespread atrocities.

Backed by a US-led coalition, Iraqi forces gradually retook control of all territory lost to the jihadists over the past three years.

The head of the coalition on Sunday congratulated the Baghdad government for defeating IS, but warned that more work needed to be done to ensure the jihadists do not strike again.

"Much work remains, and we will continue to work by, with and through our Iraqi partners to ensure the enduring defeat of Daesh (IS) and prevent its ability to threaten civilisation, regionally and globally," Lieutenant General Paul E. Funk II said in a statement.

On Saturday, the US State Department had also hailed the end of the jihadists' "vile occupation", but cautioned that "the fight against terrorism" is not over.

Experts warn that IS remains a threat, with the capacity as an insurgent group to carry out high-casualty bomb attacks using sleeper cells.

UN envoy Jan Kubis urged Iraqi people to build "a better future and common destiny for all in their united country with the same patriotism and determination that marked their nation's war against terrorism".

Saudi Arabia also congratulated Iraq on Sunday, with a foreign ministry official calling the jihadists' defeat "a grand victory on terrorism in the region", the official Saudi Press Agency reported.

Meanwhile, Abadi altered Saturday's statement in which he declared victory over IS to add a mention of the role played by the Kurdish peshmerga fighters, after complaints from the Kurdish authorities.

A statement from the autonomous Kurdish region had insisted on the "sacrifices" made by the peshmerga in the fight against the jihadists.

Meanwhile, Iraqi Interior Minister Qassem al-Araji told AFP that although "Daesh (IS) is finished militarily, there are still some sleeper cells that we will track down and eliminate".

sk-burs/hkb/srm

A vital force that helped defeat the Islamic State group, or a dangerous tool of Iran?

Fighters from Iraq's Hashed al-Shaabi have been a controversial irregular element battling on the country's front lines.

The organisation formed in 2014 after the country's most revered Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, urged citizens to take up arms against IS jihadists who had swept aside government forces and seized much of northern Iraq.

Bringing together a dizzying array of paramilitary groups under the command of Iraq's prime minister, the Hashed played a key role in battles against IS.

But the Shiite-dominated alliance remains deeply divisive and has been accused of a string of abuses.

Following Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's declaration of victory on Saturday in the country's three-year war against IS, how his government deals with the Hashed fighters is a major issue.

- Martyrs or puppets? -

Known in English as the Popular Mobilisation Units, the various forces within the Hashed can field between 60,000 and 140,000 fighters.

Iraq's parliament classes it as a state force operating within the country's constitution.

While it includes some Christian and Sunni Muslim forces, the umbrella group is dominated by powerful Shiite militias such as Kataeb Hezbollah, Asaib Ahl al-Haq and the Badr organisation.

"To many, these martyrs have given up their lives in defence of their country," the Carnegie Middle East Center said in an April report.

But "to many critics, the (Hashed) symbolises Iranian and Shiite efforts to exercise supremacy over Iraq."

It said that while the group is riven with internal rivalries, leaders have regularly met with Qassem Suleimani, the powerful commander of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards' foreign operations division.

That connection was made public in July, when the Hashed's number two Abu Mahdi al-Mohandis appeared on Iranian TV speaking Farsi and pledging allegiance to Suleimani.

- 'Part of the problem' -

As the Hashed battled across Iraq to seize territory from IS, they were frequently accused of carrying out brutal abuses.

Residents of Sunni-dominated towns that had fallen under jihadist control often feared their arrival.

As US-backed Iraqi forces regrouped and strengthened after their catastrophic collapse in the face of IS in 2014, the Hashed were increasingly sidelined.

They were kept away from the gruelling battle for IS bastion Mosul and focused instead on the smaller town of Tal Afar.

As the fight to oust IS from territories it seized in 2014 drew to a close, the group's initial purpose appeared to be in question.

"The (Hashed) is now as much part of the problem as part of the solution," Carnegie wrote.

"Many who perceived the (Hashed) to be a security asset and a saviour in the struggle against (IS) in 2014, when the Iraqi army was in shambles, now view it as more of a liability and menace."

Calls have been growing from the West for the Hashed to disband, with French President Emmanuel Macron recently calling for "a gradual demilitarisation" of the group and for all militias in Iraq to be "dismantled".

That sparked allegations of interference from senior Iraqi officials, including Vice President Nuri al-Maliki who said no other country could "impose its will on the Iraqi government".

bur-sbh/sk/mm/dv

APRIL

IRAQ WARS
Rights group criticises Iraq over jihadist suspects
Baghdad (AFP) Dec 5, 2017
Human Rights Watch in a report on Tuesday criticised Iraq and the autonomous Kurdish authorities over mass trials of suspected Islamic State group jihadists. In "Flawed Justice: Accountability for ISIS Crimes in Iraq", HRW said Baghdad and the Kurdish authorities in the north were holding "thousands of trials of Islamic State suspects without a strategy to prioritise the worst abuses under I ... read more

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