ISIS 'Mafias' Made $11 Million Per Month in Iraq Province
(AFP)
-- The Islamic State jihadist group made US$11 million per month from
"organized crime" in Iraq's Nineveh province before seizing it and
capital city Mosul, a parliamentary report obtained by AFP says.
Before Mosul was overrun on June 10
last year, IS members acted like "mafias managing organized crime," and
controlled "all the economic resources of the province," said the
report, the product of a parliamentary inquiry into the failures that
led to the city's fall.
The jihadists had "a specific system for
collecting money" and imposed "specific rates" on different social
groups as part of its highly successful racketeering, according to the
report, which has not been publicly released.
Officials from
Nineveh said IS initially received some $5 million per month from this
system, but that figure more than doubled to US$11 million soon before
seizing Mosul, according to the report, which did not specify when its
extortion efforts began.
The report cited various examples of
"taxes" levied by IS, including on petroleum products being transferred
from a major refinery in neighboring Salaheddin province, which brought
in some $1 million per month.
Cement was also "taxed" in a similar
fashion, while IS also received the salaries of 300 Mosul municipality
contractors, bringing in about 75 million dinars (roughly $62,000) per
month.
Provincial councillor Zuhair al-Chalabi said thousands of
doctors paid at least $300 per month to IS, while some 1,400 private
generator owners paid at least $200 each.
"Everyone was paying Daesh, even the vegetable sellers," the report said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
The
first case of IS extorting money that was discovered by security forces
was in a wholesale vegetable market, which generated $200,000 per
month.
This funding was "a major economic resource that helped in a
fast and efficient way to entrench this terrorist organisation and
double its human and logistical capabilities," the report said.
The
fact that IS could collect money in this way even under the authority
of the Iraqi state represented "the most prominent manifestation of the
failure" of security forces in Nineveh, it said.
When IS seized
Mosul and surrounding Nineveh province last June, it gained open
control, but at the cost of some of the lucrative revenue streams that
were cut off by the conflict.
Friday, August 21, 2015
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