Eight Iraq civilians killed in attack blamed on extremists

An Iraqi woman walks along a street in Baghdad, Iraq, July 20, 2022. (Reuters)
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Updated 20 December 2022
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Eight Iraq civilians killed in attack blamed on extremists

BAGHDAD: Suspected extremists on motorbikes stormed a village north of Baghdad late Monday and killed eight Iraqi civilians, officials said.
There was no immediate claim for the attack but the village was a focus of resistance to the Daesh group during its lightning advance through swathes of Iraq and neighboring Syria in 2014.
It came a day after Daesh extremists killed nine federal police in an ambush in Kirkuk province further north.
“A group of terrorists on motorbikes attacked the village of Albu Bali from three sides,” the mayor of the district center Al-Khalis, Odai Al-Khadran, told Iraq’s official INA news agency.
“The village is inhabited by farmers... dozens of residents mobilized to defend against the terrorist attack,” he said, adding that eight had been killed and three wounded.
An interior ministry official, who asked not to be identified, blamed IS for the attack, recalling that villagers had formed a paramilitary group to defend their land against the jihadists in 2014.
The defense ministry said it had sent a high-ranking delegation to Diyala province “to throw light on the circumstance of the criminal action.”
Daesh extremists seized large areas of Iraq and Syria in 2014, declaring a “caliphate” which they ruled with brutality before their defeat in late 2017 by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led military coalition.
IS lost its last Syrian bastion, near the Iraqi border, in 2019.
Despite the setbacks, which have left Daesh a shadow of its former self, the group can still call on an underground network of between 6,000 and 10,000 fighters to carry out attacks on both sides of the porous border, a UN report said earlier this year.
Last Wednesday a roadside bomb hit a military vehicle killing three Iraqi soldiers in farmland north of Baghdad, the defense ministry said.


Two Tunisia columnists handed over three years in prison

Updated 23 January 2026
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Two Tunisia columnists handed over three years in prison

  • Mourad Zeghidi and Borhen Bsaies have already been in detention for almost two years
  • They were due to be released in January 2025 but have remained in custody on charges of money laundering

TUNIS: Two prominent Tunisian columnists were sentenced on Thursday to three and a half years in prison each for money laundering and tax evasion, according to a relative and local media.
The two men, Mourad Zeghidi and Borhen Bsaies, have already been in detention for almost two years for statements considered critical of President Kais Saied’s government, made on radio, television programs and social media.
They were due to be released in January 2025 but have remained in custody on charges of money laundering and tax evasion.
“Three and a half years for Mourad and Borhen,” Zeghidi’s sister, Meriem Zeghidi Adda, wrote on Facebook on Thursday.
Since Saied’s power grab, which granted him sweeping powers on July 25, 2021, local and international NGOs have denounced a regression of rights and freedoms in Tunisia.
Dozens of opposition figures and civil society activists are being prosecuted under a presidential decree officially aimed at combatting “fake news” but subject to a very broad interpretation denounced by human rights defenders.
Others, including opposition leaders, have been sentenced to heavy prison terms in a mega-trial of “conspiracy against state security.”
In 2025, Tunisia fell 11 places in media watchdog Reporters Without Borders’ (RSF) World Press Freedom Index, dropping from 118th to 129th out of 180 countries.