San Diego Union-Tribune

OFFICIALS: IRAQ NABS MASTERMIND OF BOMBING

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Iraq said Monday that it has detained the mastermind behind a deadly 2016 bombing in a Baghdad shopping center, which killed around 300 people and wounded 250.

The suicide car bombing in the central Karradah district was the deadliest attack by a single bomber in the Iraqi capital after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.

Two Iraqi intelligen­ce officials said the man identified as Ghazwan al-Zobai, an Iraqi, was detained during a complex operation that was carried out with the cooperatio­n of a neighborin­g country they did not name. He had been tracked by authoritie­s for months.

They told The Associated Press that al-Zobai was detained in an unidentifi­ed foreign country and transporte­d to Iraq two days ago. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak of the operation on the record.

The 29-year-old al-Zobai was an al-Qaeda militant when he was imprisoned by the Americans in Iraq at Cropper prison until 2008, and then escaped from Abu Ghraib prison in 2013. He joined the Islamic State group after that.

The officials said alZobai plotted many attacks in Iraq, the most infamous of which was the 2016 bombing in Karrada in 2016. He operated under the Alias Abu Obaida.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi tweeted news of the arrest later Monday, describing alZobai as the “primary culprit behind the Karrada atrocity and many others.”

At least 292 people died from the bombing, most of them from an ensuing fire that turned the Hadi shopping center into an inferno.

The blaze was fed by a tinderbox of shops filled with clothing and oil-based perfumes for sale and lined with flammable panels.

Al-Zobai’s arrest came in the second such operation conducted by the Iraqi National Intelligen­ce Service since Iraq’s federal elections Oct. 10.

Iraqi officials said they captured Sami Jasim, an Islamic State group leader, last Monday in a similar operation abroad.

Jasim had a $5 million bounty on his head from the U.S. State Department, which describes him as having been “instrument­al in managing finances for IS terrorist operations.”

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