The Borneo Post

In Iraq, bloody tribal custom now classed as ‘terrorism’

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BAGHDAD, Iraq: A bloody, ageold custom used by Iraq’s powerful tribes to mete out justice has come under fire, with authoritie­s classifyin­g it as a ‘ terrorist act’ punishable by death.

For centuries, Iraqi clans have used their own system to resolve disputes, with tribal dignitarie­s bringing together opposing sides to mediate in de facto ‘hearings’.

If one side failed to attend such a meeting, the rival clan would fire on the absentee’s home or that of fellow tribesmen, a practice known as the ‘degga ashairiya’ or ‘tribal warning’.

But in an age when Iraq’s vast rural areas and built- up cities alike are flooded with weapons outside state control, the ‘degga’ may be deadlier than ever.

A recent dispute between two young men in a teashop in the capital’s eastern district of Sadr City escalated to near- fatal proportion­s, leaving a 40-year- old policeman with a broken hip and severely damaged abdomen.

His cousin Abu Tayba said the policeman was ‘ wounded in a stray bullet during a ‘degga’ on a nearby home’.

“Weeks after the incident, he’s still in the hospital, hovering between life and death,” Tayba told AFP.

Even in Baghdad, disputes often involve machine guns and rocket- propelled grenades, the city’s military command warned a top Iraqi court recently.

That body, the country’s Superior Magistrate Council, issued a decision last week classifyin­g ‘deggas’ as ‘ terrorist acts’ – and therefore warranting the death penalty – because of their impact on public safety.

A few days later, it announced it would take legal action against three people accused of targeting a home in Al-Adhamiyah, north of Baghdad, with the deadly custom.

In Iraq, a country of 39 million people, clan origin and family name can carry weight in securing a job, finding romance, and gathering political support.

They can also interfere in the work of the state, as tribal structures in some areas can be more powerful than government institutio­ns. — AFP

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