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Iraq 'police club' banned after football brawl
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 31, 2018

Iraq's Police football club, owned by the country's interior ministry, was banned Wednesday from playing in Baghdad's main stadium following a brawl between police and stadium guards.

The confrontation broke out as guards tried to keep out an Al-Shorta -- which means "police" in Arabic -- club official who had opened fire on a rival team's bus on January 21, without causing casualties.

On Tuesday, the official tried to enter the stadium for another match with the support of policemen, resulting in a punch-up with the guards.

The youth and sports ministry sanctioned Al-Shorta -- currently second in Iraq's top league -- by scrapping its contract to use the 40,000-seat Al-Shaab stadium as its home ground because of "the inappropriate behaviour" of the police.

Ali al-Atwani, spokesman for the ministry, said it insisted on the protection of stadium employees and against arms being taken into the ground.

The sports ministry urged the interior ministry to ban armed police from entering the stadium.

The Al-Shorta club was founded in the 1930s and was originally made up of policemen chosen to represent the national force at competitions.


Related Links
Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century


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IRAQ WARS
Iraqis maimed in battle struggle to survive as amputees
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 31, 2018
Karrar Hassan, 25, is just one of tens of thousands of Iraqi fighters wounded battling the Islamic State group. Now disabled, he struggles to survive on a $400 pension. In 2014, he was unemployed and joined the Hashed al-Shaabi, a paramilitary coalition dominated by Iran-backed groups that fought alongside Iraqi government forces against the jihadists. Months later, during fierce fighting for the city of Fallujah west of Baghdad, his left calf was ripped open by a blast and Karrar lost the leg. ... read more

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