Iraq Warns Syrian Rulers About Daesh Resurgence
BAGHDAD (Dispatches) -- The head of Iraq’s National Intelligence Service, Hamid al-Shatri, says Baghdad sent direct messages to Damascus about security threats posed to Iraq by Daesh cells in the Syrian desert regions.
During a session of the Baghdad Dialogue conference, Shatri stated that the recent events in Syria represent a turning point in the region. He expressed hope that “this will contribute to enhancing stability, despite some concerns related to the presence of armed groups and places of conflict in the region.”
In December, militants from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a Daesh offshoot, took power in Damascus, toppling the government of former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad after 14 years of war. HTS leader Abu Muhammad al-Julani, a former deputy to deceased Daesh leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, appointed himself president of Syria last month.
Shatri added that Iraqi and Syrian arenas are closely interconnected, and what is happening in Syria directly affects Iraq, and vice versa, and Iraq has sent clear security messages to Syria about the threats posed by some extremist groups, as Iraq has been harmed in the past period by sending suicide bombers and narcotics across the border.
Shatri explained that Iraq attaches special importance to the issue of fighting the terrorist Daesh gangs, as there are still cells affiliated with these gangs in areas such as the desert of Homs and the Levant.
He pointed out that there are about 30,000 displaced people in Syrian camps from 60 nationalities, in addition to 9,000 Daesh members detained in prisons under the control of the Kurdish-led SDF militants in the country’s northeastern Hasakah Governorate.
Among these are 2,000 Iraqis. “We want to know how the new Syrian administration will deal with this file,” Shatri stated.
He also expressed concern about weapons seized by some armed groups, including Daesh, after the fall of Assad’s government.
Shatri stressed that “Iraq continues to send messages and communicate with the Syrian leadership to achieve positive results, and there is interaction with it.”
In recent months, Iraq has been repatriating its citizens held in prisons in Hasakeh, including Al-Hol camp, where many family members of Daesh have been detained for years.
On February 11, Qasim al-Araji, Iraq’s National Security advisor, affirmed that “Al-Hol camp must be emptied.”
In January, the Iraqi parliament passed a controversial amnesty law that could lead to the release of thousands of prisoners who fought for Al-Qaeda and Daesh between 2004 and 2018.
A copy of the law shows that those found guilty of terrorism can request a retrial if they allege a confession was extracted under duress.
Lawmakers estimate that at least 30,000 prisoners will have the chance for a retrial.
The amnesty law has been sharply criticized by leaders of Iraq’s Izadi community, who fear the releases could help spark a new wave of violence against them.
In 2014, Daesh carried out genocide against the Izadi religious minority in the Sinjar region of Iraq. Thousands of Izadi men were massacred, while their women and young girls were taken as sex slaves by the extremist group.
Hundreds of thousands were forcibly expelled from their homes and lands in Sinjar. Many continue to live in tents in refugee camps in the Iraqi Kurdistan region 10 years later.