Iraq Government Considers US Strikes Violation of Sovereignty

The coffins of fighters killed in a US strike earlier in the day carried during a funeral in Baghdad on November 22, 2023. (Photo by Ahmad Al-Rubaye / AFP)
The coffins of fighters killed in a US strike earlier in the day carried during a funeral in Baghdad on November 22, 2023. (Photo by Ahmad Al-Rubaye / AFP)
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Iraq Government Considers US Strikes Violation of Sovereignty

The coffins of fighters killed in a US strike earlier in the day carried during a funeral in Baghdad on November 22, 2023. (Photo by Ahmad Al-Rubaye / AFP)
The coffins of fighters killed in a US strike earlier in the day carried during a funeral in Baghdad on November 22, 2023. (Photo by Ahmad Al-Rubaye / AFP)

The Iraqi government has condemned US strikes on targets south of Baghdad, saying they were not coordinated with Iraqi authorities in a clear violation of Iraqi sovereignty.

A government statement said the strikes were also a clear violation of the mission of the international coalition to fight ISIS.

The office of Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani called the recent escalations “a dangerous development.”

An Iranian-backed militant group in Iraq warned Wednesday it may strike additional US targets after American warplanes killed multiple militants in response to the first use of short-range ballistic missiles against US forces at Al-Asad Air Base earlier this week.

US fighter jets struck a Kataeb Hezbollah operations center and a Kataeb Hezbollah command and control node near Al Anbar and Jurf al Saqr, south of Baghdad, on Tuesday, two defense officials said.

There were Kataeb Hezbollah personnel at both sites at the time of the strikes, but the officials said they could not yet confirm whether anyone there was killed.

The group’s officials in Iraq said the attack had killed eight Kataeb Hezbollah members.



Siga Technologies to Supply Mpox Therapy in Morocco

The Mohammed VI Tower in Rabat. (AFP)
The Mohammed VI Tower in Rabat. (AFP)
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Siga Technologies to Supply Mpox Therapy in Morocco

The Mohammed VI Tower in Rabat. (AFP)
The Mohammed VI Tower in Rabat. (AFP)

Drugmaker Siga Technologies said on Tuesday it would supply its therapy for mpox in Morocco as part of a contract in response to a request from the country's health ministry for protection against any potential outbreak of the disease.

Although the antiviral therapy Tpoxx has been available in Africa through clinical trials and the World Health Organization's emergency use access protocol to deal with the current outbreak of mpox virus, this agreement marks Siga's first commercial sale of the therapy on the continent, Reuters reported.

The therapy is approved in the US and Canada for the treatment of smallpox and authorized in Europe and the UK for smallpox, mpox, cowpox and complications from vaccinia virus.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention stated last month that the outbreak is not under control, after the WHO declared it a public health emergency of international concern in August upon identifying the new variant.

Two cases of the disease have been confirmed in Morocco this year, according to the WHO.