4 Killed in ISIS Attack Near Iraq’s Mosul

Iraqi police patrol Kirkuk. (AFP file photo)
Iraqi police patrol Kirkuk. (AFP file photo)
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4 Killed in ISIS Attack Near Iraq’s Mosul

Iraqi police patrol Kirkuk. (AFP file photo)
Iraqi police patrol Kirkuk. (AFP file photo)

Four people, including two security forces personnel, were killed on Saturday in an ISIS attack on a village near Iraq’s Mosul, local and security sources said.

A security source, who asked not to be named, said that the night attack took place in a remote village near Makhmour district, south of Mosul, 300 km north of Baghdad.

Saleh al-Jubouri, director of the Qayyarah district, close to the site of the attack, said ISIS fighters attacked at around 2am a Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) security checkpoint.

A member of the PMF, an officer, mayor of the village and a civilian were killed.

The security source said seven people were wounded in the attack, in which light weapons and mortars were used.

The attack took place five days after a similar ISIS attack on a security checkpoint near southern Kirkuk that killed 13 members of the Federal Police.

The attacks took place days after a visit by French President Emmanuel Macron to Mosul during which he stressed that “we should not be complacent” in the face of terrorists, and warned that “ISIS still poses a threat.”

In late 2017, Iraq announced its victory over ISIS, after expelling the terrorist group from all the areas it had seized in 2014.

Since then, the organization’s attacks in cities have decreased significantly, but Iraqi forces are still chasing sleeper cells in mountainous and desert areas.

The US is leading an international coalition in Iraq to combat ISIS. There are currently 2,500 US troops in Iraq helping local forces.

However, Washington announced in July its intention to end its “combat mission” in Iraq by the end of the year.



Report: France Issues New Arrest Warrant for Syria's Assad

A damaged portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad hangs in the city of Qamishli, as Syrian Kurds celebrate the fall of capital Damascus to anti-government fighters on December 8, 2024. (AFP)
A damaged portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad hangs in the city of Qamishli, as Syrian Kurds celebrate the fall of capital Damascus to anti-government fighters on December 8, 2024. (AFP)
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Report: France Issues New Arrest Warrant for Syria's Assad

A damaged portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad hangs in the city of Qamishli, as Syrian Kurds celebrate the fall of capital Damascus to anti-government fighters on December 8, 2024. (AFP)
A damaged portrait of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad hangs in the city of Qamishli, as Syrian Kurds celebrate the fall of capital Damascus to anti-government fighters on December 8, 2024. (AFP)

Two French investigating magistrates have issued an arrest warrant against ousted Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for suspected complicity in war crimes, the second such move by France's judicial authorities, a source said on Tuesday.

Assad, who was ousted late last year in a lightning offensive by opposition forces, is held responsible in the warrant issued on Monday as "commander-in-chief of the armed forces" for a bombing in the Syrian city of Daraa in 2017 that killed a civilian, a source close to the case, asking not to be named, told AFP.

This mandate was issued as part of an investigation into the case of Salah Abou Nabout, a 59-year-old Franco-Syrian national and former French teacher, who was killed on June 7, 2017 following the bombing of his home by Syrian army helicopters.

The French judiciary considers that Assad ordered and provided the means for this attack, according to the source.

Six senior Syrian army officials are already the target of French arrest warrants over the case in an investigation that began in 2018.

"This case represents the culmination of a long fight for justice, in which I and my family believed from the start," said Omar Abou Nabout, the victim's son, in a statement.

He expressed hope that "a trial will take place and that the perpetrators will be arrested and judged, wherever they are".

French authorities in November 2023 issued a first arrest warrant against Assad over chemical attacks in 2013 where more than a thousand people, according to American intelligence, were killed by sarin gas.

While considering Assad's participation in these attacks "likely", public prosecutors last year issued an appeal against the warrant on the grounds that Assad should have immunity as a head of state.

However, his ouster has now changed his status and potential immunity. Assad and his family fled to Russia after his fall, according to Russian authorities.