“The Sadrist Movement” and “Asa’ib”: Iraqi blood is a red line – Al-Binaa Newspaper

The two committees that were formed from the “Sadr Movement” and “Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq” once morest the background of the recent assassinations in Maysan Governorate, agreed on a number of outcomes on the security front.

After their first meeting yesterday, the two committees condemned all murders in Maysan Governorate, emphasizing that “the largest role in enforcing the law and reducing crime” belongs to the judiciary and security services.

The statement, issued following the meeting, stressed the importance of continuing the investigation and revealing the perpetrators, calling on the media to be “cautious and accurate in transmitting news from its correct sources and not from what is published by malicious social networking sites.”

In turn, the director of the Asa’ib Ahl al-Haq office in Maysan, Abu Hadi al-Sakri, said that “calm will return to Maysan,” adding that “the Khazali and al-Sadr initiative will alienate the third party and solve the governorate’s crisis.”

He explained that “there will be a speech following the meeting of the Asa’ib and the current committees, and the law is the ruling in all agreements,” stressing that “we are able to pass the stage and give good tidings to the citizens in the province of the agreement of the League and the movement.”

In this context, Hadi Al-Amiri, head of the Al-Fateh Alliance, said yesterday that “there is no way for us but negotiation, consensus and understanding to resolve security issues.”

He pointed out that security issues differ from political negotiations, stressing the importance of calm on the security side.

Al-Amiri considered that “Iraqi blood is a red line and we should not link it to the political situation,” expressing his optimism in finding consensual exits, in reference to the existing political conflict between the Sadrist movement and other political blocs.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi National Security Adviser, Qassem al-Araji, said in a television interview, “10 thousand foreign ISIS fighters are in the prisons of the SDF,” noting that this “represents a danger because of the lack of capabilities to manage these prisons,” which witnessed weeks ago attempts to escape from the elements. affiliated with the extremist organization.

Al-Araji added that “we sent invitations to countries to receive their nationals in Hasaka prison.”

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