Iraqi Shi’ite militia chief threatens to kill politicians

A Shi’ite militia leader arrested in Iraq as said leaders of Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki’s political bloc will be killed unless he is released within 24 hours.

January 21, 2014

Sahoub Baghdadi





BAGHDAD – A Shi’ite militia leader arrested in Iraq as said leaders of Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki’s political bloc will be killed unless he is released within 24 hours.



Wathiq Al-Battat, speaking to Reuters on a mobile phone he said had been given him by a sympathetic prison guard, said he was being held without charge in solitary confinement in a small, cold cell, with no access to lawyers or his family.



Battat was detained in Baghdad on Jan. 2, six weeks after his Iranian-backed Al-Mukhtar Army fired six mortar bombs from southern Iraq into a neighboring country, causing no casualties.



In the call from his prison cell on Monday night, Battat said his Mukhtar Army would start killing members of Maliki’s State of Law bloc running in April elections unless he is freed.



“The Mukhtar Army is giving them 24 hours,” he said. “If I am not released all State of Law’s candidates will be killed...one by one. Their homes and their headquarters will be targeted.”



He said State of Law figures serving in the present government would also be on his hit list.

Iraqi officials could not immediately be reached for comment.



“I am not a terrorist. I do not have a feud with the state or its institutions and I will not target the police or army. Battat accused the authorities of detaining him to make a “sectarian balance” after they arrested outspoken Sunni lawmaker Ahmed Al-Alwani in the city of Ramadi on Dec. 28 in a raid in which Alwani’s brother and several bodyguards were killed. — Reuters

 


January 21, 2014
HIGHLIGHTS
SAUDI ARABIA
53 minutes ago

4 legal reasons a Saudi company can’t hire you

World
3 hours ago

US and Ukraine report progress in Geneva talks on evolving peace plan for Russia-Ukraine war

World
3 hours ago

Israeli strike kills senior Hezbollah commander in Beirut amid fragile ceasefire