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Top Iraqi Shiite cleric dies in Najaf
by AFP Staff Writers
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) Sept 3, 2021

Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Said al-Hakim, one of Iraq's top Shiite clerics, died on Friday aged 85 in the holy city of Najaf after a heart attack, sources close to him said.

Funeral ceremonies will be held on Saturday in Najaf and its twin holy city of Karbala, a source within his office told AFP.

Hakim "underwent surgery three days ago in hospital in Najaf and succumbed today to a heart attack", the source said.

Iraqi President Barham Saleh in a statement paid homage to the "prominent figure" in Shiite Islam.

The United States expressed its condolences in a statement from its embassy in Baghdad.

Hakim will be buried in Najaf, home to the shrine of Imam Ali, the fourth Islamic caliph and relative of the Prophet Mohammed.

Born to a family of clerics in Najaf in 1936, Hakim was considered to be among the highest Shiite religious authorities in the country.

At the time of his death, he was one of four ayatollahs of the Hawza, Najaf's Shiite seminary, along with Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Iraq's top Shiite cleric.

Hakim was imprisoned between 1983 and 1991 under the regime of former dictator Saddam Hussein who feared neighbouring Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution would set off "a similar event" in Iraq, political commentator Marsin Alshamary said on Twitter.

A Shiite clerical observer who asked to remain anonymous said that Hakim set himself apart for his "closeness to the faithful", noting that he used to mix with pilgrims during Arbaeen, a key Shiite commemoration.

"In public, he expressed no political opinion," the observer said, in line with the Shiite theological school in Iraq that opposes the Iranian "Velayat-e faqih", which establishes religious authority over politics.


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IRAQ WARS
Iraq's Mosul struggles to rebuild without funds
Mosul, Iraq (AFP) Aug 29, 2021
Iraqi shopkeeper Ahmad Riad is busy again serving customers at a Mosul market four years after the city was destroyed in battles against jihadists, but he still awaits war reparations. "Life has gradually resumed," said Riad, who runs a shop selling rice, pasta and tins of tomato paste in the Corniche market, along the banks of the Tigris river. "But we have not received any compensation from the government." Mosul, the country's second city in Nineveh province, was the last major Iraqi bast ... read more

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