Two wounded in attack on office of Iraqi parliamentary candidate

Two wounded in attack on office of Iraqi parliamentary candidate
People drive their vehicles past electoral billboards on a street in Baghdad on October 14, 2025, ahead of parliamentary elections on November 11. (FILE/AFP)
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Updated 18 October 2025
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Two wounded in attack on office of Iraqi parliamentary candidate

Two wounded in attack on office of Iraqi parliamentary candidate
  • Armed gunmen opened fire early Saturday on the office of an Iraqi parliamentary candidate south of Baghdad, wounding two bodyguards, a security source said

BAGHDAD: Armed gunmen opened fire early Saturday on the office of an Iraqi parliamentary candidate south of Baghdad, wounding two bodyguards, a security source said.
The attack on Sunni Muslim politician Muthanna Al-Azzawi’s office comes days after a bomb killed another candidate in the November 11 elections for the Shiite-majority parliament.
The gunmen fled after the attack in Yusufiyah, 25 kilometers (16 miles) south of the capital, the source told AFP.
Azzawi is a member of the Baghdad provincial council and belongs to the “Azem Alliance,” a centrist Sunni coalition led by Muthanna Al-Samarrai.
The candidate “firmly condemned the cowardly attack,” saying: “These acts will not stop us from continuing to serve our people.”
“The attackers will be punished for their actions sooner or later,” Azzawi added on his Facebook page.
A bomb killed fellow Baghdad provincial council member and election candidate Safaa Al-Mashhadani on Wednesday when it exploded under his car north of the city.
It also wounded three of his bodyguards.
Mashhadani was running with the Sovereignty Alliance, one of Iraq’s largest Sunni Muslim coalitions, led by businessman Khamis Al-Khanjar and parliament speaker Mahmoud Al-Mashhadani.
The coalition condemned the “cowardly crime,” calling it “an extension of the approach of exclusion, targeting and treachery pursued by the forces of uncontrolled weapons and terrorism, all of which seek to silence free national voices.”
Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani ordered an investigation into the attack on Mashhadani and called for the perpetrators’ arrests.
The majority of Iraq’s 329 lawmakers represent Shiite parties aligned with neighboring Iran.
The upcoming elections are the sixth since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, which toppled longtime ruler Saddam Hussein.
In Iraq, the role of prime minister traditionally goes to a Shiite and the presidency to a Kurd, while the speaker of parliament is usually Sunni.


Tunisia repatriates 10,000 migrants in 2025, vows not to become a transit zone

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Tunisia repatriates 10,000 migrants in 2025, vows not to become a transit zone

Tunisia repatriates 10,000 migrants in 2025, vows not to become a transit zone
Repatriations were carried out through a voluntary return program coordinated with the IOM
Nafti said Tunisia has reiterated to its European partners that “it will not become a transit zone“

TUNIS: Tunisia has repatriated about 10,000 irregular migrants so far this year, most of them from African countries, Foreign Minister Mohamed Ali Nafti said on Tuesday, as the North African country faces pressure from the European Union to stem crossings across the Mediterranean.
Nafti told lawmakers that the repatriations were carried out through a voluntary return program coordinated with the International Organization for Migration (IOM), with weekly flights arranged to help migrants return home.
He said that Tunisia has reiterated to its European partners that “it will not become a transit zone.”
Tunisia repatriated about 7,200 migrants in 2024 under the same initiative, according to official data, and aims to continue returning the remaining migrants until “the phenomenon is eliminated,” it has said.
Tunisia is facing a migration crisis and thousands of migrants from Africa are living in tents in forests in southern Tunisian towns such as Amra and Jbeniana after authorities prevented them from crossing the Mediterranean to reach Europe.
As Tunisia has tightened security along its maritime borders, the number of migrants reaching Europe has dropped significantly this year.