An Iraqi court on Wednesday
sentenced to death on terror charges a prominent jihadist described as a deputy
of Islamic State group leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, after he was captured in
Turkey.
"The Karkh criminal
court in Baghdad sentenced to death by hanging one of the most prominent
leaders of IS, who served as a deputy of Baghdadi," judicial spokesman
Abdel Sattar Bayraqdar said.
The Iraqi authorities
announced in February that Ismail Alwan Salman al-Ithawi had been extradited
from Turkey after fleeing first Iraq and then Syria as the group's
self-proclaimed "caliphate" crumbled.
The jihadist was tracked
and detained through cooperation between Turkish, Iraqi and US intelligence
agencies, a senior Iraqi official told AFP at the time.
He said the arrest came
after an elite Iraqi unit hunting IS members "infiltrated the highest levels"
of the jihadist group, which has claimed a string of deadly attacks in the West
in recent years.
A native of the Iraqi city
of Ramadi, Ithawi was accused of holding several positions including IS
"minister" in charge of religious edicts.
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.
He has been pronounced dead
on several occasions, but an Iraqi intelligence official said in May that he
remained alive in Syrian territory by the Iraqi border.
In a purported new audio
recording released last month, the IS chief called on Muslims to wage
"jihad".
He made his only known
public appearance in Iraq's second city of Mosul in July 2014.
Iraq has condemned several
hundred people, including around 100 foreign women, to death for IS links, and
dozens of convicted jihadists have already been executed.
Many more have been handed
life terms, including nine Tajik women who were sentenced by an Iraqi criminal
court on Wednesday for belonging to IS, a judicial official said.
The country has repeatedly
faced criticism from international human rights groups over the high number of
death sentences handed down by its anti-terrorist courts.
Iraq declared
"victory" over IS in December after a three-year war against the
jihadists who once controlled nearly one third of the country as well as
swathes of neighbouring Syria.
The Iraqi military has kept
up operations targeting mostly remote desert areas where jihadists have
continued to carry out attacks.
Over the border in Syria,
US-backed fighters last week launched a fierce assault against a dwindling
pocket of territory held by IS in eastern Deir Ezzor province.
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