Iraqi MP killed in suicide bombing claimed by IS

An Iraqi MP and prominent militia leader was one of at least 21 people killed today in a suicide bombing immediately claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group.

Baghdad: An Iraqi MP and prominent militia leader was one of at least 21 people killed today in a suicide bombing immediately claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group.

Ahmed al-Khafaji, a commander in the Shiite Badr militia, was killed in the attack in the Kadhimiyah area of Baghdad, a fellow lawmaker and a medical official said.

The bombing, which wounded at least another 51 people, was the third in the Shiite district of Kadhimiyah in four days.

In a statement posted online, the Islamic State group (IS) said that a suicide bomber it identified as Abu Aisha al-Samarraie had carried out the attack and that Khafaji was the target.

A Shiite MP said that Khafaji was killed in the attack.

"We have confirmed that he was killed, although it is not yet entirely clear whether he was the target of the attack," the MP told AFP.

A medical official also said Khafaji was among the 21 people killed in the explosion.

Khafaji was a member of the main Shiite bloc in parliament, the State of Law coalition, of which Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi's Dawa party is also part.

But he was best known as a top leader of the Badr organisation, which is one of the main Shiite militias in Iraq and has close ties to Iran.

The death of the Badr commander is the second high-profile killing in three days by IS, which also claimed an attack that killed the police chief of Anbar province on Sunday.

The Badr organisation was created in the 1980s with Tehran's backing to fight the regime of executed former president Saddam Hussein.

It is currently headed by Hadi al-Ameri, a former transport minister whose declared candidacy for the as-yet-unfilled interior and defence portfolios has raised concern at home and abroad.

Badr plays a frontline role in Baghdad's military efforts to fight back against IS and try to reclaim some of the land lost when the jihadists launched a devastating offensive in June.

Badr has for years been accused of a litany of abuses, including executions and abductions targeting the Sunni Arab minority in Baghdad and elsewhere.

The organisation is one of the four main Shiite militias in the country.

While they have ranks of up to several tens of thousands of fighters and are integrated in government operations, they act outside the law.  

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