Iraq governor’s nephew shot dead in north

The nephew of the governor of a key province where Iraqi forces are battling the Daesh group has been gunned down in the country’s north, officials said Saturday.
The shooting in Iraqi Kurdish regional capital Irbil came just hours after Nowfal Al-Aqoub, the governor of Nineveh, made controversial remarks about children being fathered by Daesh comatants in the province.
The killing of Aqoub’s nephew, who was also his personal driver, comes as Iraqi forces prepare for the battle to retake Mosul, the capital of Nineveh and the last city in the country still held by the jihadists.
Sifuk Watban Al-Sultan died of a single gunshot to the head on Friday night near the governor’s house in Irbil, the governor’s secretary told AFP, asking that he not be identified by name.
A Nineveh provincial councillor, who also spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed Sultan’s death, saying that Kurdish security forces had subsequently removed surveillance cameras from the house as part of the investigation.
The motive for the killing was not immediately clear, but it came after Aqoub made remarks at a conference in Baghdad earlier on Friday that were criticized by a political rival.
The governor said that Daesh terrorists had fathered children under temporary marriages.
Some of the women involved — including some of those who traveled to the Middle East to support Daesh — have apparently participated voluntarily, but others may have been coerced.

Source: Arab News