Iraq attempts to combat extremism after escalation of terrorist operations
An Iraqi security source said on Sunday, January 17 that an explosive device had exploded against an Iraqi army force in the Sinjar district of Nineveh province in the north of the country.
The source told RT, “Preliminary information indicates that
an explosive device has exploded on a group of Iraqi army elements, killing at
least three of them.”
For its part, the Ministry of Defense mourned Lieutenant
Colonel Haider Adel Muhammad, commander of the second regiment in the 73rd
Infantry Brigade, 15th Infantry Division.
In a press release, the Ministry of Defense stated that “the
heroic martyr, Lieutenant Colonel Haider Adel Muhammad, was killed while
performing his holy duty, along with two soldiers, as a result of the explosion
of an explosive device from the remnants of ISIS terrorist gangs while
inspecting Al-Sharaea area north of Tal Afar.”
For several years, after the fall of the regime of late
President Saddam Hussein, Iraq has suffered from great insecurity and the
extension of the influence of the Iraqi armed factions that owe loyalty to
Iran, which crowds out the US presence in Iraq.
Iraq is constantly witnessing vicious, violent attacks that
each time cause a number of casualties, including civilians, while the Iraqi
street also faces a number of threats, most notably the proliferation of
weapons, tribal disputes and organized crime.
Iraq has also suffered, since the declaration of the
establishment of ISIS in 2014, of terrorist attacks that have exacerbated the
security unrest.
In the face of all this, the Iraqi parliament is now moving
towards enacting a set of deterrent laws for anyone who incites terrorism and
extremism, most notably the Law on Community Peace, while reviewing the laws in
force and reactivating them in the country.
The head of the Committee for Peaceful Coexistence in the
House of Representatives, Aboud Al-Issawi, told the Iraqi newspaper Al-Sabah in
its Saturday issue that “the aim of this project is to prepare a road map based
on fixed rules for peaceful coexistence in the country between the sects and
components, so there was an urgent need to map and draw strategic policy and
rules for community peace in Iraq.”
Issawi added that “the proposed law of the commission was
read for the first time and amendments were made to it, and a parliamentary
committee for coexistence was formed of 11 members representing the basic
religious and national components of the country, as they had individual and
collective activities in their regions.”
“The issue of societal peace in the country needs a culture
that begins with school curricula to define coexistence, components and
citizenship, and how to accept the other,” he emphasized, stressing that this culture
remains a weapon and returns Iraq to its origins thousands of years ago after
it was a cradle of ancient civilizations and peoples of different races lived
in it.
He explained that “parliament has deterrent laws for anyone
who pushes for incitement, terrorism and extremism in the legal and endowments
committees.”
“There is a preliminary agreement to review the laws in
force and re-activate them in the Iraqi reality and put them in parliament and
add things that do not exist, such as the penal aspect with penalties, so that
anyone who violates coexistence calls for terrorism and incites hatred,” he
added.
As part of Iraq's
fight against terrorism, a police command in Basra province announced on
Saturday the arrest of a suspect wanted in accordance with terrorism
provisions.
The Iraqi News Agency (INA) quoted the police chief, Major
General Abbas Naji, as saying that “the wanted person came from Wasit
province,” adding that “the arrest was carried out through close inspection and
follow-up in the province.”
For months, the Iraqi government, led by Prime Minister
Mustafa al-Kadhimi, has been adapting campaigns to contain uncontrolled weapons
as part of the determined efforts to enhance the security of Iraq and immunize
it from potential attacks in light of the persistent influence of the armed
Shiite factions loyal to Iran.
The government confiscated thousands of uncontrolled weapons
in several areas in the Iraqi provinces, noting that the security operations
contributed greatly to the decrease in the percentage of societal crimes and
achieved the goals.
In 2017, Iraq declared victory over ISIS by regaining its
entire territory, which was estimated at about a third of the country overrun
by the terrorist organization in the summer of 2014. But the remnants of the
terrorist organization are still active through its sleeper cells in several
Iraqi regions, taking advantage of the turbulent security and political
situation to carry out repeated attacks on different regions.



