Iraqi forces kill Daesh leader, eight other terrorists in military op: PM

PM Mohammed Shia al-Sudani says Jassim al-Mazroui Abu Abdul Qader was killed in an operation by counterterrorism forces and the national security service under the Joint Operations Command in the Hamrin Mountains in Salahuddin province.

“There is no place for terrorists in Iraq, and we will pursue them to their hideouts and eliminate them,” PM Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said in a statement. / Photo: AP Archive
AP Archive

“There is no place for terrorists in Iraq, and we will pursue them to their hideouts and eliminate them,” PM Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said in a statement. / Photo: AP Archive

Iraq’s prime minister announced that Daesh's leader in Iraq was killed in a military operation along with eight of the group’s other senior leaders.‎

Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani said on Tuesday that Jassim al-Mazroui Abu Abdul Qader was killed in an operation by counterterrorism forces and the national security service under the Joint Operations Command in the Hamrin Mountains in Salahuddin province.

"There is no place for terrorists in Iraq, and we will pursue them to their hideouts and eliminate them," al-Sudani said in a statement.

The Joint Operations Command said in a statement that the operation was carried out “with technical support and exchange of accurate intelligence information by the international coalition forces.”

The identities of the others killed in the operation along with Abdul Qader will be announced after they are confirmed by DNA tests, it said.

The statement also indicated that “large quantities of weapons, ammunition and equipment were seized.”

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A coalition of more than 80 countries, led by the United States, was formed to fight Daesh, which lost its hold on the territory it controlled in Iraq in 2017 and in Syria in 2019, although sleeper cells remain in both countries and abroad.

For years, Iraqi officials had periodically called for a withdrawal of coalition forces, and formal talks to wind down the US presence in the country were ongoing for months. Iraqi officials have maintained that Iraqi security forces are able to deal with the remaining sleeper cells and prevent the group from staging a resurgence.

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