| Date: Feb 4, 2019 | Source: The Daily Star | | | |
| Killing of writer Alaa Mashzoub provokes anger in Iraq | KARBALA, Iraq: The assassination of a writer in the middle of a street in the Shiite holy city of Karbala over the weekend has provoked indignation in Iraqi cultural circles. The city’s police force said several fatal shots were fired at Alaa Mashzoub in front of his home Saturday.
In a sign of the sensitivity surrounding the subject, the police immediately tasked a senior squad to investigate, and promised to find the perpetrators.
“This is killing words - free, honest and beautiful words,” fellow writer Ali Lefta Said told AFP, in reaction to the murder.
Intellectuals and artists from Karbala, around 100 kilometers south of Baghdad, staged a sit-in Sunday.
Ahmed Saadawi, whose novel “Frankenstein in Baghdad” has scored success beyond Iraq’s borders, hit out at the culprits on his Facebook page. “You really have to be a coward to fire a gun at someone who only has words and dreams,” he wrote. “Shame on the murderers - and shame on the authorities, if they don’t find and judge them immediately.”
Tributes have poured in for the prolific novelist.
Mashzoub was well-known in Karbala, whose historic districts he wove with care into his writing.
“The cultural scene has lost one of its special authors and creators,” Iraq’s Culture and Tourism Minister Abdul Amir al-Hamdani said in a statement Sunday. Mashzoub was active in local Kerbala civil society.
“Today we are confronted by an immoral campaign aimed at eliminating culture and innovation,” mourner Hameed al-Hilali said at Mashzoub’s funeral Sunday.
Men carried Mashzoub’s coffin, draped in an Iraqi flag, along a busy road in Kerbala and others waved banners calling him a “martyr.”
Parliament’s cultural commission has said it will monitor the police investigation into his murder.
But nobody has been willing to point the finger at potential suspects, in a country ravaged by decades of violence and still contending with multiple armed groups. |
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