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IRAQ WARS
US offers funds to move Iranian exiles out of Iraq
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 24, 2013


Iraqi journalist killed in Mosul
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 24, 2013 - A cameraman for Al-Mosuliya television station was killed in north Iraq on Thursday, the channel said, the third journalist to be murdered in the city of Mosul this month.

A police officer confirmed the death of Bashar Abdulqader Najm, saying he was shot dead by gunmen in front of his house.

His murder came after gunmen killed two journalists from Iraq's Sharqiya television channel in Mosul on October 5.

Mosul is one of the most dangerous areas in Iraq, with militants frequently carrying out attacks and also reportedly extorting money from shop owners in the city.

Iraq has come in for repeated criticism over shortcomings in media freedom.

"Many Iraqi journalists are routinely exposed to threats, murder attempts, attacks, difficulties obtaining permission, denial of access, confiscation of equipment and so on," media rights watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said earlier this year.

Also on Thursday, a roadside bomb exploded on a commercial street in the Amriyah area of Baghdad, killing three people and wounding 11, officials said.

And another bomb exploded near a roadside food stand in Madain, south of Baghdad, killing two people and wounding 11.

Violence in Iraq has reached a level unseen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal sectarian conflict.

More than 550 people have now been killed this month, and more than 5,250 since the beginning of the year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.

A study released this month by academics based in the United States, Canada and Iraq said nearly half a million people have died from war-related causes in Iraq since the US-led invasion of 2003.

The United States on Thursday offered $1 million to help resettle Iranian opposition exiles currently in Iraq, contributing to a UN appeal in the wake of violence.

More than 3,000 members of the People's Mujahedeen Organization of Iran, allowed by late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to operate in the country, are staying at a former US military base known as Camp Hurriya, or Liberty, on Baghdad's outskirts.

The United States will contribute $1 million to a fund launched Wednesday by UN chief Ban Ki-moon aimed at finding new homes abroad for the exiles, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said.

"We share the conviction that relocation is the only lasting means of guaranteeing the safety and well-being of those residing at Camp Hurriya," Harf said in a statement.

Iraqi authorities had ordered the transfer of remaining members of the group's Camp Ashraf, which is in the central province of Diyala, after 52 members died in violence on September 2.

The authorities blame infighting in the group for the deaths. The People's Mujahedeen gave a vastly different account of what happened, saying troops entered the camp and set fire to property.

The People's Mujahedeen initially took up arms against Iran's shah and then set its sights on toppling the clerical regime that came to power after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The group says it has renounced violence and has enlisted high-profile US supporters in their cause. Last year, the State Department removed its designation as a terrorist organization following similar decisions in Europe.

Albania and Germany have agreed to take in exiles, but the UN has struggled to resettle most of them.

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Iraq is being torn apart anew by sectarian violence, fueled in part by the civil war in neighboring Syria, with some 7,000 people killed so far this year in a chilling reprise of the wholesale slaughter of 2006-07 between majority Shiites and minority Sunnis. Much of the current violence is the work of hard-line Sunni jihadists of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL. ... read more


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