BFF-22 Iraqis say Russian missiles killed IS leader’s son

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BFF-22

IRAQ-CONFLICT-IS-SYRIA-BAGHDADI

Iraqis say Russian missiles killed IS leader’s son

BAGHDAD, July 5, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Russian forces killed the son of Islamic
State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a missile attack on a Syrian cave
in which he was hiding, Iraqi intelligence said Wednesday.

IS’s propaganda outlet Amaq said Hudhayfah al-Badri was killed in an
“operation against the Nussayriyyah and the Russians at the thermal power
station in Homs”, in a statement published Tuesday alongside a photo of a
young man holding an assault rifle.

Nussayriyyah is the term used by IS for the Alawite religious minority sect
of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Iraq’s Falcon’s intelligence cell said Russian forces on Monday fired three
missiles at a cave in Homs that held 30 “terrorist leaders” and several of
Badri’s bodyguards.

It said 11 people were killed in the attack.

“Badri wasn’t even a fighter… he was an icon that was moved from one
place to another as a form of psychological propoganda for the rest of the
organisation,” the Falcons said on Wednesday.

The Iraqi government declared victory over IS in December, but the military
has continued regular operations targeting mostly desert areas along the
porous Syrian border.

The group’s leader Baghdadi, who has been pronounced dead on several
occasions, remains alive in Syrian territory by the Iraqi border, an Iraqi
intelligence official said in May.

Originally from Iraq, Baghdadi has been dubbed the “most wanted man on the
planet” and the United States is offering a $25 million reward for his
capture.

On June 22, Badri escaped an Iraqi air force raid that killed two of his
bodyguards, including Saud Mohammed al-Kurdi, also known as Abu Abdallah, who
was married to Baghdadi’s daughter Duaa.

IS declared a cross-border “caliphate” in Syria and Iraq in 2014, seizing a
third of Iraq during a sweeping offensive.

While the jihadists have lost much of the territory they once controlled,
IS still controls pockets in Syria’s central desert province of Homs, and
areas along the border between Syria and Iraq.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1146 hrs