The Pak Banker

Thousands march in show of Iraqi paramilita­ry force

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Thousands of members of Iraq's umbrella of mostly Shiite militias known as Popular Mobilizati­on Forces marched in a parade Saturday, the largest show of strength since the founding of the controvers­ial paramilita­ry group.

Russian-made tanks, boats, rocket launchers and ammunition were on display in the parade in Diyala province, north of Baghdad, held to mark the seventh anniversar­y of the formation of the PMF, establishe­d after a 2014 call to arms by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani to defeat militants from the Islamic State group.

At the time, IS held a third Iraq's territory and the Iran-backed militias were critical to boosting the Iraqi government forces, which aided by the U.S.-led coalition eventually defeated the Islamic State group.

However, a rift has recently emerged between the paramilita­ry force and the government, following the arrest of PMF commander Qassim Musleh last month on terrorism charges.

Musleh was later released, a move that embarrasse­d Iraq's leadership and laid bare the limits of the government's ability to bring militia leaders to account. Also on Saturday, a bomb-laden drone struck a building in an empty village just 3 kilometers (2 miles) from the new location of the U.S. Consulate in Irbil, in Kurdish-run northern Iraq.

The building was still under constructi­on and there were no casualties, according to a senior Kurdish official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized reporters.

Rockets and drones have continued to target the U.S.-led coalition across Iraq, with Western officials blaming Iran-backed Shiite militias. Iran-backed groups have become the most powerful and influentia­l within the PMF.

The parade, held in Camp Ashraf, saw Russian-made tanks, boats and locally made rocket launchers come down a broad thoroughfa­re.

Also taking part in the parade were PMF units with Yazidi militiamen, who marched wearing their ceremonial white, as well as Christian and Sunni groups. The marchers also held large posters of Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, a top militia leader killed in a US-led airstrike last year outside the Baghdad airport.

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