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Twenty years on from the September 11th terror attacks, the Taliban are back in power in Afghanistan.

After being driven out by US forces following 9/11, the US commitment to withdraw from the country ahead of the two-decade anniversary has resulted in Islamist rule there once again.

Despite Taliban promises to keep al Qaeda and other terrorist groups out of Afghanistan, several members of their new government have links to Osama bin Laden and former Taliban leader Mohammed Omar.

As the world marks 20 years since 9/11, Sky News looks at who the attackers were and how they are linked to the extremist ideology that inspired them.

Pilots and ‘muscle hijackers’

There were 19 attackers in total – split between four planes.

Four were trained pilots and each accompanied by three to five “muscle hijackers” who overwhelmed passengers and crew while they took control of their respective aircrafts.

The group, who came from Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Lebanon and Egypt, were chosen by al Qaeda leaders in Afghanistan in 2000 before undergoing training at various camps across the country.

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Those selected then travelled to Saudi Arabia to obtain US visas, before finally flying to America to await take-off on 11 September.

American Airlines Flight 11

The first plane took off from Logan International Airport in Boston and was bound for Los Angeles International Airport but crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center at 8.46am.

Pilot

Mohamed Atta, 33, Egypt

9/11 Terrorists mugshot American Airlines Flight 11
Pictured : Mohamed Atta - pilot

Atta was quickly identified as the ringleader of the 9/11 attacks.

The 33-year-old grew up in a strict household in Egypt where he was made to study hard. His family were not believed to be particularly religious.

After completing a degree in architecture at Cairo University he moved to Germany and enrolled on another course at the Technical University of Hamburg-Harburg.

It was in Hamburg that his religious views appear to have intensified.

He formed a prayer group for like-minded Muslims at his mosque, where he met two of the other 9/11 pilots – Marwan al Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah.

They became known as the ‘Hamburg cell’ after seeking out al Qaeda and eventually meeting Osama bin Laden.

Atta arrived in the US in the summer of 2000 and underwent flight training in south Florida.

He travelled on several commercial flights to better understand how to carry out the hijacking.

Hijackers

Wail al Shehri, 28, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - American Airlines Flight 11
Wail al Shehri, / Wail alShehri,

Wail and Waleed al Shehri were brothers from Asir, a deprived region of Saudi Arabia that borders Yemen, often referred to as the “wild frontier”.

Wail was a primary school teacher in Khamis Mushait but travelled to the holy city of Medina in 2000 for help with his mental health problems.

Accompanied by his brother, the pair were redirected to Afghanistan where they were recruited by al Qaeda to take part in the 9/11 attacks.

He arrived in the US in June 2001.

Waleed al Shehri, 22, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - American Airlines Flight 11
Waleed al Shehri
Waleed alShehri,

Wail’s brother Waleed travelled with him to Medina and then to Afghanistan.

They took part in an al Qaeda training camp before acquiring US visas and travelling to America.

In May 2001 he flew with fellow hijacker Satam al Suqami from Fort Lauderdale in Florida to Freeport in the Bahamas.

The men had reservations at the Bahamas Princess Resort but were turned away due to visa issues on arrival.

He also flew solo to San Francisco in July, staying in Las Vegas for a night on the way back.

This was an unusual move as he was not instructed to take surveillance flights like some of the other attackers.

Satam al Suqami, 25, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - American Airlines Flight 11
Satam al Suqami
Satam alSuqami

Al Suqami was born and brought up in the Saudi capital of Riyadh.

He was studying law when he was recruited by al Qaeda along with fellow Saudi hijacker Majed Moqed to undergo terrorist training in Afghanistan.

Suqami was not considered particularly religious before his involvement with al Qaeda and had been known to drink alcohol.

Reports claim his passport was found close to the World Trade Center, with a member of the public picking it up and handing it to police shortly before the towers fell.

Abdulaziz al Omari, 22, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - American Airlines Flight 11
Abdulaziz al Omari
Abdulaziz alOmari

Al Omari was another hijacker from the poor Saudi province of Asir.

He had a degree from the Imam Muhammad Ibn Saud Islamic University and often served as an imam at his mosque.

The 22-year-old was married with a daughter.

He is believed to have been taught by the radical Saudi Cleric Sulayman al Alwan at his mosque in al Qassim province – the heartland of what has been described as the strictest form of Islam known as Wahhabism.

The mosque has been referred to by experts as a “terrorist factory”.

Al Omari was identified by his passport, which was left in luggage at the airport that never made it onto his flight.

United Airlines Flight 175

The second plane was on the same route as the first, having taken off from Logan International Airport in Boston – destined for Los Angeles.

After it was hijacked it crashed into the south tower of the World Trade Center at 9.03am.

Pilot

Marwan al Shehhi, 23, United Arab Emirates

 9/11 terrorists - United Airlines Flight 175
Marwan al Shehhi pilot
Marwan alShehhi

Al Shehhi was a student in the UAE before he moved to Germany in 1996.

In Hamburg at the al Quds mosque he met two of the other 9/11 pilots Mohamed Atta and Ziad Jarrah.

After offering themselves to al Qaeda and attending a camp in Afghanistan, al Shehhi arrived in Florida to do his flight training, obtaining his pilots licence in December 2000.

He was heavily involved in the planning of the attacks and took several surveillance flights to study how they would be carried out.

Al Shehhi was the youngest of the four pilots on 9/11.

Hijackers

Fayez Banihammad, 24, United Arab Emirates

 9/11 terrorists - United Airlines Flight 175
Fayez Banihammad
Fayez Baniham-mad

Banihammad was one of only two Emirati hijackers.

He left his family in the UAE and travelled to the Asir region of Saudi Arabia where several of the other hijackers were from.

From there he was recruited to al Qaeda, telling his family he was going travelling to take part in relief work overseas.

He had links to one of the Saudi men who is alleged to have financed the attacks – Mustafa al Hawsawi.

Banihammad travelled to the US on a tourist visa.

Ahmed al Ghamdi, 22, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - United Airlines Flight 175
Ahmed alGhamdi
Ahmed al-Ghamdi

Al Ghamdi was one of four hijackers to come from the Saudi region of Al Bahah.

It is largely isolated and underdeveloped, but home to several religious tourist sites.

He left school early to fight the Russians in Chechnya where he was likely recruited to al Qaeda and then sent to Afghanistan to train.

Al Ghamdi was an imam and known as particularly religious.

He arrived in the US in May 2001 on a tourist visa.

Hamza al Ghamdi, 20, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - United Airlines Flight 175
 Hamza alGhamdi
 Hamza al-Ghamdi

Hamza al Ghamdi was among the youngest hijackers and came from the Al Bahah region of Saudi Arabia along with Ahmed al Ghamdi, Saeed al Ghamdi and Ahmad al Haznawi.

According to their travel records and family testimonies, the group were in contact with each other as early as 1999.

He, like Ahmed, left Saudi to fight in Chechnya and was recruited to al Qaeda there.

Hamza al Ghamdi also entered the US on a tourist visa in May, but continued to tell his family he was in Chechnya.

Mohand al Shehri, 22, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists - United Airlines Flight 175
Mohand alShehri
Mohand al-Shehri
Mohand  Shehri

Al Shehri was unrelated to the Al Shehri brothers, despite all three being from the same region.

He like several others in the group travelled to Chechnya to fight the Russians, having failed his studies in Saudi Arabia.

Al Shehri attended a training camp in Afghanistan and was selected by al Qaeda officials to take part in the 9/11 attacks.

American Airlines Flight 77

The third flight to crash had taken off from Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia.

It was destined for Los Angeles International Airport but hijacked over Ohio before crashing into the Pentagon in Washington DC at 9.37am.

Pilot

Hani Hanjour, 29, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - American Airlines Flight 77,
Hani Hanjour -pilot

Hanjour was the only pilot who already had his commercial licence before being selected by al Qaeda.

He also had very good English having first travelled to the US to study at the University of Arizona in 1991.

Hanjour returned to the US to live in California in 1996 before training to become a pilot in Arizona, finally getting his licence in 1999.

He arrived back in the States for the last time in December 2000, meeting up with fellow attacker Nawaf al Hazmi in San Diego before going back to Arizona for some pilot refresher training.

They moved to Virginia in 2001 and attended the Dar al Hijrah Falls Church where the imam Anwar al Awlaki preached.

Hijackers

Nawaf al Hazmi, 25, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - American Airlines Flight 77
Nawaf al Hazmi
Nawaf alHazmi

Nawaf and Salem al Hazmi were the second pair of brothers who carried out the 9/11 attacks.

He and Khalid al Mihdhar were the first attackers to arrive in the US in preparation for the hijackings.

Nawaf al Hazmi was already on the CIA’s watchlist.

He was earmarked as a potential pilot but underperformed at his flying lessons in San Diego in 2000, with leaders allowing him to stay on as a hijacker.

Al Hazmi resettled in Virginia with pilot Hani Hanjour in April 2001, before carrying out the attacks in September.

Khalid al Mihdhar, 26, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - American Airlines Flight 77
Khalid al Mihdhar,
Khalid alMihdhar,

Al Mihdhar was another attacker already known to the CIA at the time of the attacks.

He had left home to fight with the Bosnian Mujahideen during the Bosnian War of the 1990s.

There he was likely recruited to travel to Afghanistan to train with al Qaeda.

He arrived in the US to train as a pilot, but like al Hazmi, fell short of requirements and was demoted to being a “muscle hijacker”.

At this point he travelled back to see his family in Yemen for a month and had to be convinced to return to Afghanistan for training.

Miihdhar was reported to have complained about life in the US before his death.

Majed Moqed, 24, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - American Airlines Flight 77,
Majed Moqed

Moqed was from a small town called Al-Nakhil, west of Medina, in Saudi Arabia.

He was studying law at university when he was recruited to Afghanistan to train with al Qaeda.

Moqed was friends with Satam al Suqami, who was a hijacker on the first 9/11 flight.

He arrived in the US in May 2001 and helped plan the attacks in the months before they were carried out.

Salem al Hazmi, 20, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - American Airlines Flight 77,
Salemal Hazmi
Salem al-Hazmi

Salem al Hazmi was the younger brother of Nawaf, who was a hijacker on the same flight as him.

His family, from the Al Bahah region, claimed he was a difficult teenager and not particularly religious.

A member of al Qaeda said his brother Nawaf pleaded with Osama bin Laden to let him take part in the attacks.

He arrived in the US on a tourist visa in June 2001 and settled in New Jersey before 11 September.

United Airlines Flight 93

The fourth and final plane involved in the 9/11 attacks had taken off from Newark International Airport in New Jersey bound for San Francisco International Airport.

It was hijacked and headed towards Washington DC, but passengers managed to overcome the attackers and crash land in a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

Pilot

Ziad Jarrah, 26, Lebanon

 9/11 terrorists  - United Airlines Flight 93
Ziad Jarrah pilot

Jarrah was the only hijacker to come from Lebanon.

He grew up in a secular household but moved to Hamburg, Germany in the 1990s where he met two of the other pilots Mohamed Atta and Marwan al Shehhi.

They formed what became known as the Hamburg cell and joined al Qaeda.

He arrived in Florida to train as a pilot in the summer of 2000 but returned to Germany to see his girlfriend after getting his licence.

It was reported that Jarrah changed his mind about the plot while he was away from the US.

Ramzi bin al Shibh, another member of the Hamburg cell, is believed to have convinced him to go through with it.

He had prepared to travel to the US to get his pilots licence but was refused a visa.

Jarrah was identified by his passport, which was found at the crash site.

Hijackers

Saeed al Ghamdi, 21, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - United Airlines Flight 93
Saeed al Ghamdi
Saeed alGhamdi

Al Ghamdi was also from the Al Bahah region of Saudi Arabia.

He shared the same tribal affiliations as Ahmed al Ghamdi, who was on the second plane, and Ahmad al Haznawi, who was on the same plane.

Al Ghamdi, like several others, dropped out of education to fight the Russians in Chechnya and was rediverted to Afghanistan to train with al Qaeda.

He arrived in the US in June 2001, practicing for the attacks in Florida.

The 21-year-old was identified by his passport, which, along with Jarrah’s, was discovered at the crash site.

Ahmad al Haznawi, 20, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - United Airlines Flight 93
Ahmad al Haznawi
Ahmed  al Haznawi

Al Haznawi came from the isolated Al Bahah region of Saudi Arabia.

Like many of his contemporaries he fought in Chechnya, where he was sent to Afghanistan for an al Qaeda training camp.

He arrived in the US in June 2001 and lived in Florida while he prepared for the attacks in September.

Ahmed al Nami, 23, Saudi Arabia

 9/11 terrorists  - United Airlines Flight 93
Ahmed al Nami
Ahmed alNami

Al Nami was born in the impoverished Asir region of Saudi Arabia.

He had trained in announcing the call to prayer and left his family to go on the Hajj pilgrimage in 2000 but never returned.

After being recruited by al Qaeda he went to an Afghan training camp where he met the al Shehri brothers and Saeed al Ghamdi, who was also on his plane.

He arrived in the US in May 2001 on a tourist visa and lived in Florida ahead of the attacks.

Al Qaeda and the Taliban

Osama bin Laden

Osama bin Laden in 1998

Osama bin Laden founded al Qaeda in 1988 after fighting against the Soviets with the Mujahideen in Afghanistan.

He was from a wealthy Saudi family but settled in Afghanistan after the conflict to set up a base for his jihadist group.

The Taliban ruled the country for five years between 1996 and 2001, during which time its leader Mohammed Omar formed ties with bin Laden as he plotted an attack on the US.

Although their ideologies differed, both groups’ beliefs were rooted in extreme Islam and a hatred of the West.

The Taliban were ousted during President George Bush’s War on Terror but are back in power following the US withdrawal in August.

Although bin Laden was killed in an operation by the Obama administration in 2011, and the Taliban has promised not to allow al Qaeda into the country, many of their current ministers are linked to the old regime.

Mohammad Hasan Akhund – acting prime minister

Mullah Mohammad Hasan Akhund in Pakistan in 1999

Mohammad Hasan Akhund is from Kandahar, the birthplace of the Taliban and former home of al Qaeda’s Al Farouq training camp, where several of the attackers prepared for the 9/11 attacks.

He is also an associate of former Taliban leader Mohammed Omar, who had longstanding links with bin Laden before 2001.

Khairullah Khairkhwa – acting culture and information minister

Khairullah Khairkhwah

Khairullah Khairkhwa was captured by the US following the attacks in 2001 and detained at Guantanamo Bay.

He was released in 2014 and is now back in power.

The former governor of Herat province has long been accused of being a close associate of bin Laden and other al Qaeda members, something he denies.

Mohammad Yaqoob – acting defence minister

Mohammad Yaqoob is Mohammed Omar’s son.

His father had developed close ties with bin Laden in the years before 9/11.

Yaqoob’s family connections with the former Taliban give him extremely high rank in today’s organisation.

He is also thought to have had the backing of Saudi Arabia throughout his military career.

Abdul Ghani Baradar – acting deputy prime minister

Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar is said to be the Taliban's political leader

Abdul Ghani Baradar co-founded the Taliban movement.

He is the only surviving group leader to have been personally appointed by Mohammed Omar – bin Laden’s associate-turned rival.

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Sudan: Civilians trapped as UN warns of possible imminent attack on city of al Fashir by Rapid Support Forces

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Sudan: Civilians trapped as UN warns of possible imminent attack on city of al Fashir by Rapid Support Forces

The United Nations has expressed increasing concern over a potential imminent attack on al Fashir, the capital of North Darfur in Sudan.

It comes as residents describe the city as “seriously suffocated” and besieged by Sudanese paramilitary forces known as the Rapid Support Forces (RSF).

A spokesperson for the office of UN secretary general Antonio Guterres said in a statement that “an attack on the city would have devastating consequences for the civilian population”.

“The escalation of tensions is an area already on the brink of famine,” with the rival Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) appearing to be “positioning themselves”.

The last of Darfur’s five state capitals not under full RSF control, al Fashir city and its 800,000 inhabitants face an uncertain fate as a local ceasefire negotiated in the early days of the conflict has collapsed.

Mr Guterres has reiterated his call on all parties to refrain from fighting in the area.

At least 43 people, including women and children, have reportedly been killed since the RSF began their push into al Fashir earlier this month, Friday’s UN statement continued, and civilians are trapped in the city.

More on Sudan

The North Darfur capital and sprawling displacement camps in its suburbs have been a haven for thousands of people displaced by armed conflict and ethnic violence in the region since the early 2000s, including the last year of war between the RSF and SAF.

Sudan was plunged into chaos in mid-April 2023 when tensions between its military, headed by General Abdel Fattah Burhan who leads the SAF, and the RSF paramilitary, commanded by Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, broke out into street battles in the capital Khartoum.

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Sudan’s health system crippled by conflict

Fighting has spread to other parts of the country, especially urban areas and the western Darfur region.

The conflict has left around 25 million people, or half the country’s population, needing humanitarian aid, with over eight million forced to flee their homes, said the UN.

More than 14,000 people have been killed and tens of thousands of others wounded.

Residents have told Sky News the RSF is blocking main arterial routes bringing in goods and fuel to al Fashir, leaving them with dwindling medicine, humanitarian aid and food supplies as increased army airstrikes have hit civilian homes in surrounding areas.

Many fear a telecoms blackout which marked the start of an RSF-led massacre last year in al Geneina, the capital of West Darfur, and December’s siege of Wad Madani, the capital of al Jazira state, as reports mount of an RSF advance.

Read more:
Sudan could be weeks away from a ‘catastrophic hunger crisis’
The orphaned and disabled children forced to flee fighting in Sudan

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Sudan: A year of war at home

An online video shows a large RSF convoy in the desert, with militiamen yelling “lift your head al Fashir, the steel is coming”.

“Al Fashir is unsafe and an attack is expected at any time. Three days ago, a shell fell into my uncle’s house – only 80 metres from my home. My uncle was injured and my cousin’s son died,” said Mohamed.

“The city is seriously suffocated.”

Fighting displaced 40,615 people in al Fashir between 1 and 16 April, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).

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‘Where will people go?’

Aid organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, has said it has responded to three mass casualty events in al Fashir’s South Hospital over the past week and treated over 100 wounded patients.

“The situation is already catastrophic and we are very worried that the escalation in conflict is going to make it even worse,” said MSF spokesperson Kirsty Cameron.

Alarm bells are sounding with little hope of successful intervention.

“Where will people go? People have fled to al Fashir from surrounding areas that are still unsafe. There are no more options for refuge,” said Darfuri journalist and human rights monitor Ahmed Gouja.

“They are forced to surrender to their death.”

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Hamas releases video of hostages as efforts to broker a ceasefire in Gaza continue

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Hamas releases video of hostages as efforts to broker a ceasefire in Gaza continue

Hamas has released a new video that appears to show two hostages who have been held in Gaza since the 7 October assault on southern Israel.

The two men, Keith Siegel, 64, and Omri Miran, 47, speak in the video against an empty background, sending their love to relatives and asking to be released.

The video was released during the Passover holiday, when Jews celebrate the biblical story of gaining freedom from slavery in Egypt.

Sky News has decided not to show the video online.

In the footage, Mr Siegel breaks down in tears as he recalls spending last year’s Passover with his family, saying he hoped they would be reunited.

Mr Miran was taken from his home in Nahal Oz in front of his wife and two daughters, while Siegel, who is a dual US citizen, was abducted with his wife, although she was released during the brief truce in November.

Keith Siegel is being held hostage by Hamas. A video was released of him on 27 April.
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Keith Siegel

Omri Miran is being held hostage by Hamas. A video was released of him on 27 April.
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Omri Miran

Some 250 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage during the 7 October Hamas attack, which killed around 1,200 people.

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It prompted Israel’s assault on Gaza, as it pledged to destroy Hamas and bring the hostages home.

Some 34,000 Palestinians have been killed in the conflict so far, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.

Also on Saturday, Hamas said it was reviewing a new Israeli ceasefire proposal.

Hamas senior official Khalil al Hayya did not share details of Israel’s offer but said it was in response to a Hamas proposal made two weeks ago.

This included a six-week ceasefire, release of 40 civilian and sick hostages, in exchange for the release of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Israel’s foreign minister said on Saturday that the country’s planned incursion into the southern Gaza city of Rafah could be put on hold if a deal is struck to secure the release of Israeli hostages.

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A man holds a placard as people attend a protest against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government and to call for the release of hostages kidnapped in the deadly October 7 attack on Israel by the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Tel Aviv, Israel, April 27, 2024. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
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The hostage situation is putting pressure on Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu. Pic: Reuters

The prospect of an attack on Rafah has prompted concern from various countries, including Israel’s staunchest ally, the US.

Meanwhile, Egypt also ramped up its efforts to broker a deal that could end the war.

An Egyptian delegation left Israel on Saturday after talks there about a “new vision” for a ceasefire in Gaza.

This would include the release of some hostages and Palestinian prisoners and the return of many displaced Palestinians to their homes in northern Gaza with “minimum restrictions”, according to an Egyptian official.

Hamas still wants a permanent ceasefire and full withdrawal of Israeli troops but Israel has rejected both of these, saying it will continue military operations until Hamas is defeated and it will maintain a security presence in Gaza.

It came as protests continued around the world calling for an end to the conflict, including pro-Palestinian demonstrations in London and at universities across the US.

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Om Fahad: Iraqi social media influencer shot dead by gunman on motorbike who posed as food delivery rider – report

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Om Fahad: Iraqi social media influencer shot dead by gunman on motorbike who posed as food delivery rider - report

A well-known Iraqi social media influencer has reportedly been shot dead in her car by a gunman on a motorbike.

Om Fahad, whose real name is Ghufran Sawadi, was killed outside her home in Baghdad’s Zayouna district on Friday, according to the AFP news agency, citing security officials.

It appears the unidentified attacker pretended to be delivering food to the victim, one security source said.

Om Fahad, who has nearly half a million TikTok followers, became famous for posting light-hearted videos where she dances to Iraqi music.

Six days ago, she shared footage of herself driving in a car and also posing in front of a mirror. They have each been watched hundreds of thousands of times.

The influencer was sentenced to six months in prison in February last year for sharing videos that a court ruled contained “indecent speech that undermines modesty and public morality”.

A campaign was launched in 2023 by the Iraqi government to clamp down on social media content which broke the country’s “morals and traditions”.

The interior ministry set up a committee to look for “offensive” clips on platforms such as TikTok and YouTube, with several influencers being arrested.

“This type of content is no less dangerous than organised crime,” the ministry declared in a promotional video which asked the public to help by reporting such content.

“It is one of the causes of the destruction of the Iraqi family and society.”

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Speaking last year, interior ministry spokesman Saad Maan argued the morality campaign has “nothing to do with freedom of expression”.

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Injuries after explosion at Iraq military base
UK soldiers ‘exposed’ to toxic chemical in Iraq must get answers

In 2018, gunmen in Baghdad shot dead Tara Fares, who was a model and influencer.

After years of war and sectarian conflict following the 2003 US invasion that overthrew dictator Saddam Hussein, Iraq has returned to some semblance of normality despite sporadic violence, political instability and corruption.

But civil liberties, particularly among women and sexual minorities, are still constrained in a conservative and male-dominated society.

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