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IRAQ WARS
Iraq forces retake key town south of Mosul
By Abdelhamid Zebari
Qayyarah, Iraq (AFP) Aug 25, 2016


Iraq parliament impeaches defence minister
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 25, 2016 - Iraqi lawmakers on Thursday voted to impeach Defence Minister Khaled al-Obeidi over corruption allegations, MPs said.

Obeidi lost a no confidence vote by 142 to 102 in a secret ballot, while 18 abstained, two members of parliament told AFP.

The vote removes one of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's key Sunni allies from government and comes as Iraqi forces ramp up preparations for an offensive against Mosul, the Islamic State group's last major stronghold in the country.

The shock impeachment is the latest development in a bitter feud that erupted this month between Obeidi and parliament speaker Salim al-Juburi, the highest-ranking Sunni politician in Iraq.

Obeidi was questioned in parliament over corruption allegations to which he answered with accusations of his own implicating Juburi and several MPs.

Juburi moved quickly and agreed to have his immunity lifted so that he could be investigated, only for a special integrity court to drop the case hours later.

Obeidi had said the accusations against him were trumped up and retaliation for his refusal to buy in to corrupt defence deals.

"I tried to fight corruption in every way but it appears that its lords are stronger and their voices louder," he said in a statement after the vote.

He then made a thinly-veiled reference to Nuri al-Maliki, the powerful former prime minister who many observers suspect of manoeuvering behind the scenes to undermine every move Abadi and his allies make.

- Impact on the battle -

"I spared no effort in building the army... whilst striving to fight the corruption and nepotism that led Iraq to lose 40 percent of its territory in 2014, displaced millions of people, threatened its shrines as well as its beloved capital Baghdad," Obeidi said.

Maliki had been premier for eight years when the army, gangrened by nepotism and hollowed out by a system in which "ghost soldiers" enrolled but did not show up for duty, collapsed completely in the face of a vast June 2014 IS assault.

Alia Nasayif, one of the MPs accused of corruption by Obeidi and a vocal Abadi critic, welcomed the outcome of Thursday's vote.

"What happened today restored the prestige of the Iraqi state. It's the first time that parliament takes action and uses its authority to remove a corrupt minister," she said.

She dismissed any suggestion that the defence minister's impeachment could affect the war effort.

"The battle is being led by real commanders at the joint command and his exit won't have much impact. He is not a minister who fights Daesh (IS), he's a corrupt minister," Nasayif told AFP.

Jassem Hanoun, an Iraqi political and security analyst, disagreed and argued the timing could not be worse.

"What happened today is a negative development, especially in terms of timing," he said.

"It will have a direct impact on the battle since the ministry will be run by the deputy, who has limited authority," Hanoun said.

Iraqi forces on Thursday pushed the Islamic State group from Qayyarah, a northern town considered strategic for any future offensive against the jihadists' last stronghold of Mosul.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi hailed the victory as a key step in the fight against IS but hours later suffered yet another political setback when lawmakers impeached his defence minister.

Special forces, backed by US-led coalition air strikes, wrapped up a three-day operation to retake Qayyarah, a town located on the banks of the Tigris river.

"We control all parts of the town and managed, in very limited time, to root out Daesh," Lieutenant General Riyadh Jalal Tawfik, who commands Iraq's ground forces, told an AFP reporter in Qayyarah, using an acronym for IS.

The commander said engineering units were now clearing the town, which lies about 60 kilometres (35 miles) south of Mosul, of unexploded ordnance and booby traps.

Residents greeted the security forces under skies blackened by huge fires IS fighters set to nearby oil wells in recent days.

The bodies of suspected IS fighters were strewn across some of the town's streets, especially around its southern entrance, which saw the worst fighting and significant destruction.

Abadi issued a statement hailing what he said was a key step towards reclaiming Mosul, IS's de facto Iraq capital and the country's second city.

"Our heroic forces achieved a big victory, an important step towards the liberation of Mosul," Abadi said.

The prime minister's mood was unlikely to have remained upbeat very long however, with one of his key allies losing a no confidence vote by parliament moments later.

The house impeached Defence Minister Khaled al-Obeidi by 142 votes to 102 -- and 18 abstentions -- over corruption allegations.

Obeidi's downfall is the latest development in a bitter feud that erupted this month with rival Sunni politician Salim al-Juburi, who is the parliament speaker.

- Qayyarah residents cooperated -

At a hearing in parliament, Obeidi answered graft accusations against him by saying they were trumped up because he had refused to be part of corrupt deals.

He fought back with his own allegations against Juburi and other lawmakers but the speaker escaped unscathed after an integrity committee dropped the case.

"I tried to fight corruption in every way but it appears that its lords are stronger and their voices louder," Obeidi said in a statement after the vote.

Unity in Iraq's Sunni camp is seen as key to preparing an offensive against Mosul.

The operation against Qayyarah was launched on Tuesday and led by Iraq's elite counter-terrorism service (CTS).

Iraqi forces had already recaptured a nearby air field and Qayyarah is expected to become one of the main launchpads for an assault on Mosul in the coming weeks or months.

Officers have said the push into Qayyarah was coordinated with small groups of armed residents opposed to IS inside the town.

"The people were very cooperative, that is why none of them fled, they did not attack our forces and our forces did not hurt them," General Tawfik said.

A CTS spokesman confirmed pro-government sleeper cells were involved in the operation but would not provide further details.

IS has suffered a string of military setbacks over the past year and lost more than half of the territory it controlled two years ago, in a trend that looks irreversible.

Jassem Hanoun, an Iraqi political and security analyst, argued the timing of Obeidi's removal could not be worse.

"It will have a direct impact on the battle since the ministry will be run by the deputy, who has limited authority," he said.

The jihadists are vastly outnumbered and outgunned in the Mosul area but, besides the obstacles raised by a divided political class, Iraq also faces an unprecedented humanitarian crisis.

Around 3.4 million people have already been forced to flee their homes by conflict since the start of 2014.

The United Nations' refugee agency warned this week that an offensive on Mosul could displace another 1.2 million people and cause a major disaster.


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