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Iraqis Outraged By Visit Of Syrian Leader Jolani Over al-Qaeda Past
2025-04-24
182 words
1 min read

Iraqis Outraged By Visit Of Syrian Leader Jolani Over al-Qaeda Past
Safaa Rashid was barely an adult in 2005 when an explosion ripped through the Iraqi capital Baghdad, killing his 21-year-old cousin, a university student who was working part-time at an electrical goods shop in the city’s center. “A suicide bomber stormed the market and detonated his explosive belt, killing my cousin and dozens of innocent people in an instant,” said Rashid, now 38 and still living in Baghdad. “He was just at the beginning of his life.”
Safaa lost two other cousins that same year in blasts that were attributed to al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI), the armed group that would evolve into ISI, the Islamic State in Iraq (later just Islamic State), and is responsible for tens of thousands of deaths in Iraq and abroad.
One of those who joined AQI’s campaign at the time was a young Syrian named Ahmed al-Sharaa, who later would reappear in his homeland under the name Abu Mohammed al-Jolani and last year successfully overthrew President Bashar al-Assad to become Syria’s new ruler.
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