Baghdadi tops new list of Iraq’s most wanted
BAGHDAD: Iraqi authorities have revealed a new list of the “most wanted” figures involved in terrorism in the country.
Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the leader of Daesh and the world’s most wanted man unsurprisingly tops the list, according to a copy seen by Arab News.
The list, the third one produced by the Iraqi security authorities in recent days, includes 14 names.
Among them are five suspects from other Arab countries: A Qatari, two from Saudi Arabia, a Jordanian and one Yemeni.
Abdulrahamn Al-Qaduli, the second in command of Daesh, Nashwan Abd Al-Razzaq Abd Al-Baqi, one of the top leaders of Al-Qaeda and Muthana Harith Al-Dhari, the secretary-general of the Association of Muslim Scholars in Iraq are all on the list.
The document does not provide much information about each suspect other than the family name, the first name, the date and place of birth and the nationality.
All of the men already appear on a wanted list by Interpol, the international police organization. Some have been wanted for more than a decade for being associated with militant groups operating in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. The groups include Al-Qaeda, its offshoot Daesh and Ansar Al-Islam.
Most of those on the Iraqi wanted list were “participating in the financing, planning, facilitating, preparing or perpetrating of acts or activities,” linked to the insurgent groups operating in Iraq in the last few years, according to Interpol.
The latest list from Iraq was further confirmation that Baghdadi had not been killed in an airstrike launched by the coalition against Daesh leaders in July.
Iraqi security officials told Arab News that the intelligence information they have received indicate that Baghdadi is still alive and moves around in a small area of territory still held by the extremist group on the Syrian side of the border.
“We believe that Baghdadi is still alive, linked to Daesh and he is in the Syrian territories near the Syrian-Iraqi border,” a senior Iraqi intelligent official told Arab News. “Everyone knows that he was injured many times as a result of the airstrikes launched by the US.”
The official was referring to airstrikes on the border towns of Qaem and Rawaa and on convoys moving in the western desert of Iraq.
“Our information suggests that he is weak, isolated and not in full control of the organization as his movements are very restricted within the areas that still under the control of his followers in Syria,” the official said. “He is working now to save himself much more than working to preserve the organization.”
There have been endless speculation and conspiracy theories about Baghdadi’s whereabouts.