Tag: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi

  • IS confirms death of group’s leader Al-Baghdadi – Reports

    IS confirms death of group’s leader Al-Baghdadi – Reports

    The Islamic State terrorist group (IS) has confirmed the death of its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, media reported Tuesday, citing an IS statement.

    According to the Al Sumaria News broadcaster, Al-Baghdadi is dead and his successor will be named soon.

    On June 16, the Russian Defence Ministry said Al-Baghdadi was likely eliminated as a result of a Russian Aerospace Forces strike on a militant command post in the southern suburb of the city of Raqqa in late May.

    The ministry noted that it was in the process of confirming the information through various channels.

    Al-Baghdadi appeared in the media for the first time in 2014 when he declared the creation of a caliphate in the Middle East.

    Since then, the media outlets have reported several times about the death of the IS leader, though the information has never been confirmed.

    NAN reports on June 23,  experts said if Al-Baghdadi is confirmed dead, he is likely to be succeeded by one of his top two lieutenants.

    Iyad Al-Obaidi and Ayad Al-Jumaili, both were army officers under late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

    Experts on Islamist groups said they see no clear successor but regard Al-Obaidi and Al-Jumaili as the leading contenders, though neither would be likely to assume Baghdadi’s title of “caliph” or overall commander of Muslims.

    Armed groups fighting in the region and U.S. officials say they have no evidence he is dead and many regional officials are skeptical about the reports of his death.

    Obaidi, who is in his 50s, has been serving as war minister.

    Jumaili, who is in his late 40s, is head of the group’s Amniya security agency.

    In April Iraqi state TV said Jumaili had been killed, but that was not confirmed.

    Both joined the Sunni Salafist insurgency in Iraq in 2003, following the U.S.-led invasion which Saddam and empowered Iraq’s Shi’ite majority.

    They have been Baghdadi’s top aides since airstrikes in 2016 killed his then deputy Abu Ali al-Anbari, his Chechen war minister Abu Al-Shishani and his Syrian chief propagandist, Abu Al-Adnani.

    “Jumaili recognises Obaidi as his senior but there is no clear successor and, depending on conditions, it can be either of the two (who succeeds Baghdadi),” said Hisham Al-Hashimi, who advises several Middle East governments on IS affairs.

    Baghdadi awarded himself the title of caliph, the chief Muslim civil and religious ruler, regarded as the successor of the Prophet Mohammad, in 2014.

    Obaidi or Jumaili would be unlikely to become caliph because they lack religious standing and Islamic State has lost much of its territory.

    “They don’t belong to the Prophet Mohammed’s lineage. The group has no longer ‘a land to rule’ or ‘Ardh al-Tamkeen’.

    “And none is well versed in Islamic theology,” said Fadhel Ragheef, another Iraqi expert on the extremist group.

    “A caliph has to have an Ardh al-Tamkeen, which he rules in accordance with Islamic law. Failing that, the successor will just be recognized as the emir,” said Hashimi.

    Emir is Arabic for prince, and is a title that jihadists often use to describe their leaders.

    By contrast, Baghdadi, born as Ibrahim Awad al-Samarrai’ in 1971, comes from a family of preachers and studied Islamic law in Baghdad.

    The appointment of the new leader would require the approval of an eight-member shoura council, an advisory body to the caliph.

  • IS leader ‘raped American hostage’

    A United States aid worker who was killed in February while held hostage by Islamic State militants in Syria, was sexually abused by the group’s top leader, American officials told ABC news.

    Kayla Mueller, 26, was repeatedly raped by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, they said.

    Counter-terrorism officials made her family aware of the abuse in June, the BBC reports.

    Mueller was abducted while working in Aleppo, Syria, in 2013. IS said she was killed in a Jordanian air strike, but the U.S blames IS for her death.

    “We were told Kayla was tortured, that she was the property of Baghdadi. We were told that in June by the government,” her parents, Carl and Marsha, told ABC News.

    Baghdadi personally took the humanitarian aid worker to the home of another senior IS member – Abu Sayyaf – who was in charge of IS oil and gas until his death in a U.S special forces operation in May, ABC news, citing U.S officials, reports.

    The channel said he regularly visited the compound where she was being held and repeatedly assaulted her.

    Officials said they had obtained information about the abuse from at least two teenage Yazidi girls who were held hostage as sex slaves and found inside the Sayyaf compound at the time of the U.S attack.

  • IS leader’s wife detained in Lebanon

    IS leader’s wife detained in Lebanon

    Lebanese security forces have detained a wife and son of Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi near the border with Syria, the army says.

    The pair, whose names were not given, were picked up by military intelligence after entering Lebanon 10 days ago.

    The al-Safir newspaper reported that Baghdadi’s wife was being questioned at the Lebanese defence ministry.

    In June, Baghdadi was named the leader of the “caliphate” created by IS in the parts of Syria and Iraq it controls.

    Last month, the group denied reports that he had been killed or injured in an air strike by US-led forces near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul.

    It released an audio recording purportedly of Baghdadi in which he said the caliphate was expanding and called for “volcanoes of jihad” to erupt.

    Describing them as “a valuable catch”, al-Safir said that, in co-ordination with foreign intelligence services, the IS leader’s wife and son were detained at a border crossing near the town of Arsal while trying to enter Lebanon from Syria with forged papers.

    IS and al-Nusra Front are holding about 20 Lebanese soldiers hostage

    They were currently being held for interrogation at the defence ministry’s headquarters in al-Yarza, in the hills overlooking Beirut, it added.

    A security source told the AFP news agency that the woman was a Syrian citizen and that her son was eight or nine years old.

     

  • Rebels declare ‘Islamic state’ in Iraq and Syria

    Rebels declare ‘Islamic state’ in Iraq and Syria

    Jihadist militant group Isis has said it is establishing a caliphate, or Islamic state, on the territories it controls in Iraq and Syria.

    It also proclaimed the group’s leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, as caliph and “leader for Muslims everywhere”.

    Setting up a state governed under strict Islamic law has long been a goal of many jihadists.

    Meanwhile, Iraq’s army continued an offensive to retake the northern city of Tikrit from the Isis-led rebels.

    The city was seized by the insurgents on 11 June as they swept across large parts of northern-western Iraq.

    In a separate development, Israel called for the creation of an independent Kurdish state in response to the gain made by the Sunni rebels in Iraq.

    The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isis) announced the establishment of the caliphate in an audio recording posted on the internet on Sunday.

    Generations of Sunni radicals have dreamt of a moment when, in the words of Isis spokesman Abu Muhammad al-Adnani, Muslims “shake off the dust of humiliation and disgrace” and a new caliphate rises out of the chaos, confusion and despair of the modern Middle East.In one of the Isis videos uploaded on Sunday, a bearded fighter called Abu Safiyya guides the viewer around a newly demolished border post. The video, with its arresting imagery and impressive production values, is designed to electrify the group’s followers.

    The fact that Abu Safiyya is described as being from Chile merely adds to what the authors hope is now the organisation’s global appeal.

    Isis said the Islamic state would extend from Aleppo in northern Syria to Diyala province in eastern Iraq.

    Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group said, would become the leader of the state and would be known as “Caliph Ibrahim”.

    In the recording, the rebels also demanded that all Muslims “pledge allegiance” to the new ruler and “reject democracy and other garbage from the West”.

    On Sunday, Iraqi government jets struck at rebel positions and clashes broke out in various parts of Tikrit, witnesses and officials said.

    Troops had reportedly pulled back to the nearby town of Dijla as Saturday’s initial offensive met stiff resisAn Iraqi machine-gunner guards a highway west of Karbala, a Shia holy city

    The heavy fighting over the two days caused many casualties on both sides, eyewitnesses and journalists told the BBC.

    Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for the creation of an independent Kurdish state in response to gains made by Sunni insurgents in Iraq.

    In a speech in Tel Aviv, he said the Kurds were “a nation of fighters and have proved political commitment and are worthy of independence”.

    The Kurds have long striven for an independent state but they remain divided between Syria and Turkey, Iran and Iraq.

    The international community, including neighbouring Turkey and the US, remains opposed to the breakup of Iraq.