The Province

SLAYINGS SHOCK IRAQ

Outspoken model, activist, other women targeted

- SINAN SALAHEDDIN The Associated Press

BAGHDAD — She was a 22-year-old former beauty queen, fashion model and social media star, whose daring outfits revealed tattoos on her arms and shoulder.

Tara Fares won fame and 2.8 million Instagram followers in conservati­ve, Muslim-majority Iraq with outspoken opinions on personal freedom, such as: “I’m not doing anything in the dark like many others; everything I do is in the broad daylight.”

It was also the way she died.

Last week, she was shot and killed at the wheel of her white Porsche on a busy Baghdad street during the day, apparently by a man who leaned in briefly and opened fire before speeding away on a motorcycle with an accomplice.

The killing, caught on security camera video, followed the slaying of a female activist in the southern city of Basra and the mysterious deaths of two well-known beauty experts.

The violence has shocked Iraq, raising fears of a return to the kind of attacks on prominent figures that plagued the country at the height of its sectarian strife.

Iraq is still recovering from its bloody fight against Islamic State militants.

The country has been without a government since national elections in May, and riots have repeatedly broken out in the south.

“These harrowing crimes are worrying us,” said Iraqi human rights activist Hana Adwar. “There are groups that want to terrify society through the killing of popular women and activists ... and to tell other women to abandon their work and stay at home.”

It is not clear whether the deaths of the women are connected, and reports that they knew each other could not be confirmed.

Fares had become a social media darling, with bold posts and photos and YouTube videos of herself posing in elaborate makeup, tight jeans and blouses that showed off her tattoos.

She also spoke out occasional­ly against religious, tribal and political leaders.

In one of her videos, Fares had chastised a Shiite cleric who she said had sought a temporary marriage with her, a tradition in Shiite communitie­s that critics compare to prostituti­on.

“I’m not afraid of the one who denies the existence of God, but I’m really afraid of the one who kills and chops off heads to prove the existence of God,” she wrote on Instagram in July.

 ?? — ANMAR KHALIL/AP ?? Flowers and candles mark the gravesite of slain social media star Tara Fares.
— ANMAR KHALIL/AP Flowers and candles mark the gravesite of slain social media star Tara Fares.

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