Bangkok Post

US puts new IS chief on terror blacklist

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WASHINGTON: The United States on Tuesday placed the new leader of the Islamic State group on its blacklist of terrorists, naming him as Amir Mohammed Abdul Rahman al-Mawli.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that Mr Mawli was named leader of the ultra-violent group after an October raid by US commandos killed its chief

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

The organisati­on had earlier named Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Quraishi as its new head, but US officials acknowledg­ed they knew little about him — and later came to believe that the Islamic State group was using his nom de guerre.

Mr Mawli “was previously active in al-Qaeda in Iraq and is known for torturing innocent Yazidi religious minorities”, Mr Pompeo said.

“We’ve destroyed the caliphate and we remain committed to ISIS’s enduring defeat no matter who they designate as their leader,” he added.

A US-led coalition, spearheade­d on the ground by Syrian Kurdish fighters, crushed the Islamic State’s so-called caliphate that once stretched for vast stretches of Iraq and Syria — but the group has inspired attacks much farther afield.

Mr Mawli was named a specially designated global terrorist, putting him on a list created after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks that makes any support to him a crime in the United States.

The State Department has already issued a US$5 million (162.2 million baht) bounty for informatio­n leading to his capture.

A scholar in Islamic sharia law, Mr Mawli rose through the ranks by issuing edicts to justify the persecutio­n of the Yazidi, a campaign that the United Nations has described as genocide.

The jihadists killed thousands of Yazidis, who practice an ancient religion, and abducted and enslaved thousands more women and girls as they rampaged across the Middle East.

The Guardian, in a January article that cited intelligen­ce sources, said that Mr Mawli was raised in an Iraqi Turkmen family — making him one of the few non-Arabs to rise through the ranks of the extremist group.

The newspaper said that intelligen­ce officials were unsure of his whereabout­s but believe he likely followed Baghdadi to Idlib, the last Syrian outpost out of the control of Syrian President Bashar alAssad’s forces.

The Counter Extremist Project, which tracks militants, said that Mr Mawli served in the Iraqi military under Saddam Hussein before joining al-Qaeda in Iraq.

 ??  ?? Mawli: Served in Iraqi army
Mawli: Served in Iraqi army

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