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IRAQ WARS
Marriage a distant dream for many in Iraq's Mosul
By Mohammad Salim, Mohammad Salim
Mosul, Iraq (AFP) May 17, 2018

Denmark to pull special forces out of Iraq
Stockholm (AFP) May 17, 2018 - NATO-member Denmark said Thursday its special forces taking part in the US-led coalition against the Islamic State group in Iraq would be withdrawn following the IS defeat.

"We have now reached a point where we can begin withdrawing our special forces because (IS) no longer has control over large areas in Iraq," Danish foreign minister Anders Samuelsen said in a statement.

Up to 60 special forces were sent to Iraq in 2016 to train and advise Iraqi soldiers after a vote by the Danish parliament.

The forces also took part in operations on the Iraqi-Syrian border, providing intelligence and ad hoc air support.

"Their Iraqi partners are now ready to stand on their own two feet," Danish defence minister Claus Hjort Frederiksen said in the statement.

"(IS) have been forced away from virtually all the areas which the terrorist organisation occupied in Iraq," he added.

The Scandinavian nation currently has around 180 troops stationed at the Al-Asad air base near Baghdad, where they have been training Iraqi soldiers and Kurdish security forces.

Iraq sentences Russian IS member to death: judicial source
Baghdad (AFP) May 17, 2018 - A court in Iraq on Thursday sentenced to death a Russian jihadist for being a member of the Islamic State group, a judicial source said.

The person who received the sentence in Baghdad's central criminal court was only identified by the name Hassanov, said the same source.

More than 300 people, including around 100 foreigners, have been sentenced to death in Iraq in the past few months, while many others have received life sentences, according to the source.

Most of the convicted foreigners are Turkish or come from former Soviet states.

A German woman and a French woman were recently sentenced to life imprisonment.

Hundreds of Iraqis appear in court near-daily, accused of being jihadists.

On Wednesday, two Iraqi defendants were released, a judicial source told AFP.

IS took over nearly one third of Iraq in a blistering 2014 offensive, seizing control of the country's second largest city, Mosul, among others.

Baghdad declared military victory over the jihadists in December, after expelling them from all urban centres.

During its three-year long self-proclaimed caliphate, IS perpetrated "crimes against humanity," according to a UN commission of inquiry that has called for the group's leaders to be prosecuted by the International Criminal Court.

The president of the court of appeals in eastern Baghdad met David Marshall, an official at the UN's Human Rights Office, on Thursday.

Marshall said a UN delegation would visit Iraq soon, according to a statement by Iraq's judiciary.

Khulud yearns to be swept away by a "prince charming", but like many young Iraqis in the former jihadist stronghold of Mosul she worries she may never marry.

"I haven't found a husband or a job -- my life consists of household chores," says the 24-year-old university graduate, who feels increasingly trapped in her parents' home.

"My older sister, who is 37, already has four children... I still perhaps have a chance to find a husband, but my 29-year-old sister has much less" hope, Khulud adds, a sad smile marking the corners of her mouth.

Before the Islamic State group (IS) made Mosul its self-proclaimed capital in mid-2014, Iraq's second city was a bastion of traditionalism and conservatism. It was rare for women to hit their 20s before marrying or being engaged.

Back in government hands since July last year, the city is still scarred by nine months of brutal combat.

Reconstruction is under way, but with 21,500 homes destroyed or badly damaged, the task is overwhelming, Iraqi authorities say.

And the wait for young people to seal their nuptials is getting longer and longer. Suitors are finding it increasingly hard to save enough cash to fund a dowry and a wedding, never mind set up home with a spouse.

- Dashed hopes -

Mumen Abdallah also dreams of marriage.

"I have a degree in economics, but this hasn't helped me realise my dream," says the 38-year-old, one of a crowd of men lounging on a cafe terrace.

He still hasn't left the family home and the little cash he earns as a taxi driver is barely enough to help with the rent, in a cramped household of seven.

Manaf Khaled, a 32-year-old social worker, says a woman's marriage prospects can depend on her employment.

"Many men prefer to marry a woman who works and contributes to household expenses," she says.

Some couples are even relying on charity. At a function room in Mosul, hundreds of people -- the guests from 10 wedding parties -- tuck into a communal meal.

Mohammed Sami, a 27-year-old blacksmith who is among the grooms, tells AFP he is just happy to be here, despite not being able to afford a suit for himself or a wedding dress for his wife.

During the three years IS was in control of Mosul, the city was cut off from the central government in Baghdad.

Under the occupation, public sector workers went without wages. Some are still waiting to rejoin the payroll, as the security services carry out investigations in the former IS fiefdom.

"Unemployment and the long interruption to salaries has prevented very many young people who want to start a family from marrying," Ashraf Ismail, who works in women's protection, tells AFP.

- Cash for marriage? -

In a bid to unblock the bottleneck, lawmaker Jamila al-Obeidi has been pushing a novel proposal in Iraq's parliament.

She wants the government "to provide five million dinars ($4,000, 3,300 euros) to every man wishing to marry, then a million dinars for each child born," she tells AFP.

But there are strings attached. "The proposed wife must be older than the 'normal' marriage age, divorced, or a war widow," she says.

While the initiative has gained the support of 70 lawmakers, it hasn't been adopted by the government.

But if it ever became law, it might give 38-year-old Rim, who does not give her full name, a ray of hope.

"A husband may never come for me," she says.

"When I was young, I refused many suitors so as to finish my studies and wait for the arrival of my prince charming, but now the chances of meeting him are slim," she laments.


Related Links
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Fiery cleric, paramilitary leader surge at Iraq elections
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An alliance headed by nationalist cleric Moqtada Sadr and a rival bloc of pro-Iranian former fighters appeared to surge Monday in surprise preliminary results from Iraq's first poll since the defeat of the Islamic State group. If confirmed, the outcome would throw open the race to become the next prime minister, as internationally favoured incumbent Haider al-Abadi lagged behind after a vote hit by record abstentions. According to partial results seen by AFP, the Marching Towards Reform allianc ... read more

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