Tajikistan pardons over 100 Syria, Iraq returnees

Daesh fighters are seen in an undated video. (AP)
Updated 08 February 2018
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Tajikistan pardons over 100 Syria, Iraq returnees

DUSHANBE: Tajikistan has granted amnesty to more than 100 of its nationals following their return home from Syria and Iraq, where they had joined radical groups, the interior minister said Thursday.
Speaking at a news conference in the Tajik capital Dushanbe, Interior Minister Ramazon Rahimzoda said the returnees had been pardoned in line with a 2015 government pledge.
“Regarding the fate of 111 Tajik citizens who returned from Syria and Iraq voluntarily, all of them are free under Tajik law,” Rahimzoda said.
Most of the returnees in question had spent time in Syria, which became a magnet for militants from around the globe following its descent into civil war in 2011.
Rahimzoda also told reporters that 250 citizens of Tajikistan, a majority-Muslim country, had died fighting for radical groups in Iraq and Syria, mostly the Daesh group.
Authorities have previously said that over 1,000 Tajik citizens, including women, had joined the radical militants.
Most had traveled to Syria and Iraq through Russia, where over a million Tajiks are believed to work as labor migrants.
The Daesh group’s most high-profile Tajik recruit Gulmurod Khalimov had served as the chief of the interior ministry’s special forces unit prior to his sensational defection in 2015.
Russia’s defense ministry said in September last year that Khalimov, who may have been Daesh’s “minister of war,” had been killed in an airstrike.
Rahimzoda said Thursday that Tajikistan was still verifying that report.
Mountainous Tajikistan, the poorest former Soviet republic, shares a 1,300-kilometer (800-mile) border with Afghanistan, long a hotbed of militancy and the world’s largest producer of opium and heroin.
Governments have warned that fighters returning to their home countries after the collapse of the Daesh group could raise the terror threat there.


Italian base in Iraqi Kurdistan hit by missile

Updated 12 March 2026
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Italian base in Iraqi Kurdistan hit by missile

ERBIL: An Italian military base in Iraqi Kurdistan was ​struck by a missile overnight though no injuries were reported, the Italian defense ministry said on Thursday.
“A missile hit our ‌base in ‌Irbil. There ​are ‌no ⁠casualties ​or injuries among ⁠the Italian personnel. They are all fine,” the ministry said on X shortly after midnight ⁠on Thursday.
Defense Minister Guido ‌Crosetto ‌has been ​in constant ‌contact with senior military ‌commanders over the incident, the ministry added.
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said in ‌a separate message on X that Italian military ⁠personnel ⁠had taken shelter in a bunker and all were “well and safe.”
Italy has around 300 troops in Irbil, working on training Kurdish security forces, the defense ministry ​said ​on its website.