After Iraq's elections results were announced a few days ago, internal security services
raided the Najaf residences of students of a grand ayatollah opposed to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki:
Sheikh Ali Najafi, the son of Shiite cleric Bashir al-Najafi, announced May 19 on his Facebook page that
police and intelligence forces were raiding the houses and schools of
international students, mainly Pakistanis, and dragging scores of them
to Iraqi police stations. This incident coincided with the announcement
of the results of the Iraqi parliamentary elections held at the end of last month. Shortly before the elections, Sheikh Bashir criticized the government of Nouri al-Maliki, accusing it of using money and power to buy votes.
He also called on the people not to vote for Maliki’s electoral list...
The raids came under the pretext of implementing residency laws for
foreigners in Iraq, although authorities had no previous reports of
violations by students in that regard. This raises doubts about the
campaign targeting Pakistani students who are sponsored by Najafi.
The news stirred fierce reactions within the Najaf religious establishment. The head of cleric Ali al-Sistani's bureau said,
“The arbitrary, humiliating and cruel measures security agencies have
adopted against a number of Pakistani students in the Shiite seminaries,
and the arrest of scores of them under the pretext of implementing the
residency laws for foreigners in the country, are completely
unacceptable and strongly condemned. Higher authorities should halt
these practices, conduct investigations into those who carried them
out and take suitable measures against them."
To clarify, Grand Ayatollah Najafi is himself of Pakistani origin, though he has lived in Iraq for half a century.
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