Kuwait Times

Iraq jihadism expert Hashemi shot dead

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BAGHDAD: Renowned jihadism expert Hisham AlHashemi was shot outside his home in Baghdad on Monday and died shortly thereafter at a local hospital, Iraqi officials said. Hashemi was an authoritat­ive voice on Sunni jihadist factions including the Islamic State group, but was also frequently consulted by media and foreign government­s on domestic Iraqi politics and Shiite armed groups. He had warm ties with top decision-makers, including President Barham Saleh, but was also trusted by rival parties and armed groups, which used him as a mediator.

The investigat­or assigned to the killing told AFP that Hashemi, 47, walked out of his home in east Baghdad and was getting into his car when three gunmen on two motorcycle­s fired at him from meters away. Hashemi was wounded and ducked behind his car, but the gunmen approached and shot him four times in the head at close range, the investigat­or said. A medical source at the hospital confirmed to AFP that Hashemi had suffered “a hail of bullet wounds in several body parts.” “He passed away and his body is now in the hospital freezer,” said Saad Maan, head of the ministry’s media relations department.

No stranger to threats Raised in Baghdad, Hashemi published several books on jihadism, then went on to work with top research centers including Chatham House in London and most recently the Center for Global Policy in Washington, D.C. He had come out strongly in favor of the popular protests that erupted across Baghdad and Iraq’s Shiite-majority south in October, which had slammed the government as corrupt, inefficien­t and beholden to neighborin­g Iran. More than 500 people lost their lives in protest-related violence, including several prominent activists who were gunned down in Baghdad, Basra in the south and other cities gripped by the rallies. High-profile political killings have otherwise been rare in recent years. But Hashemi was no stranger to threats.

In September, anonymous online accounts accused him and a dozen other Iraqi activists, researcher­s and journalist­s of “collaborat­ing with Israel.” In April, he was threatened again by anonymous Twitter users who deemed him too close to the US government. But his killing has sent shock waves across Iraq. From protesters and activists to foreign ambassador­s and the United Nations, many were quick to mourn him. “Cowards killed my friend and one of the brightest researcher­s in Iraq, Hisham Al-Hashemi. I am shocked,” wrote Harith Hasan, who was an academic researcher before becoming an advisor to Iraq’s current premier.

Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhemi swore he would hold Hashemi’s killers to account. “We vow to his killers that we will pursue them so they are justly punished. We will not allow assassinat­ions to return to Iraq for a single second,” Kadhemi said in a statement. The UN’s top official in Iraq Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaer­t slammed the killing as a “despicable act of cowardice.”

“Our heartfelt condolence­s to his family and loved ones. I call on the government to quickly identify the perpetrato­rs and bring them to justice,” she wrote. And Iraq’s Hashed Al-Shaabi, a statespons­ored network of armed factions including many who are close to Iran, published a statement mourning Hashemi’s death.

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 ?? — AFP ?? BAGHDAD: TV screen grab shows Jihadism expert Iraqi Hisham Al-Hashemi speaking during an interview in Baghdad.
— AFP BAGHDAD: TV screen grab shows Jihadism expert Iraqi Hisham Al-Hashemi speaking during an interview in Baghdad.

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