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'Baghdadi's wife has been in custody for a year'

During a speech in Ankara, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pointed out that slain Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's wife has been in their hands for a year or a year and a half.

Baghdadi's wife
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Published : Nov 7, 2019, 8:32 PM IST

Ankara: Turkish authorities have held slain Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's wife in custody for over a year and were exploring ways to deport her, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday.

Baghdadi was the world's most wanted terrorist until his death last month during a US special forces raid on a property in the Syrian province of Idlib.

"His wife has been in our hands for a year or a year and a half," Erdogan said, confirming the news that first emerged on Wednesday.

"Baghdadi committed suicide in a tunnel. There has been a great media campaign about this. We have arrested his wife, but we have not made any fuss about it. I'm saying it now for the first time," the Turkish leader had said on Wednesday.

Turkish officials said that they had also captured Baghdadi's sister and several other relatives in northern Syria.

"After capturing them, we put them in a deportation center. While they are there, we will see what the ministry of justice can do. The wife will face the same process."

Around 10 members of Baghdadi's family were currently being held in Turkey.

US President Donald Trump announced the terrorist leader's death on October 27.

Read also: Baghdadi died 'whimpering and crying'

According to his account of events, the IS leader detonated a suicide belt when he was cornered by military canines at the end of a tunnel, killing three children he brought with him.

Ankara's influence in northern Syria has grown since early October when it launched a military operation aimed at clearing Kurdish militias from a 30-km buffer zone along its border stretching from the Euphrates River in the west to the Iraqi border in the east.

The Kurdish militias, dominated by the People's Protection Units (YPG), had been a key US ally in the battle against the IS in north and northeast Syria.

Turkish authorities, however, consider them to be a terror organization intrinsically linked to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in southeast Turkey.

Ankara-backed Syrian militias, members of the armed opposition groups in the country and now control territory along the Turkish border area.

Baghdadi was tracked down to a safehouse located just a few kilometers from that border.

Read also: Watch: Pentagon releases video, photos of Baghdadi raid​​​​​​​

Ankara: Turkish authorities have held slain Islamic State (IS) leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's wife in custody for over a year and were exploring ways to deport her, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday.

Baghdadi was the world's most wanted terrorist until his death last month during a US special forces raid on a property in the Syrian province of Idlib.

"His wife has been in our hands for a year or a year and a half," Erdogan said, confirming the news that first emerged on Wednesday.

"Baghdadi committed suicide in a tunnel. There has been a great media campaign about this. We have arrested his wife, but we have not made any fuss about it. I'm saying it now for the first time," the Turkish leader had said on Wednesday.

Turkish officials said that they had also captured Baghdadi's sister and several other relatives in northern Syria.

"After capturing them, we put them in a deportation center. While they are there, we will see what the ministry of justice can do. The wife will face the same process."

Around 10 members of Baghdadi's family were currently being held in Turkey.

US President Donald Trump announced the terrorist leader's death on October 27.

Read also: Baghdadi died 'whimpering and crying'

According to his account of events, the IS leader detonated a suicide belt when he was cornered by military canines at the end of a tunnel, killing three children he brought with him.

Ankara's influence in northern Syria has grown since early October when it launched a military operation aimed at clearing Kurdish militias from a 30-km buffer zone along its border stretching from the Euphrates River in the west to the Iraqi border in the east.

The Kurdish militias, dominated by the People's Protection Units (YPG), had been a key US ally in the battle against the IS in north and northeast Syria.

Turkish authorities, however, consider them to be a terror organization intrinsically linked to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in southeast Turkey.

Ankara-backed Syrian militias, members of the armed opposition groups in the country and now control territory along the Turkish border area.

Baghdadi was tracked down to a safehouse located just a few kilometers from that border.

Read also: Watch: Pentagon releases video, photos of Baghdadi raid​​​​​​​

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Will appoint new PM if elected president: Premadasa
         Colombo, Nov 7 (PTI) Sri Lanka's ruling party presidential contender Sajith Premadasa on Thursday said he would appoint a new prime minister if he wins the next week's election, indicating that his party leader and incumbent premier Ranil Wickremesinghe will lose the office after the polls.
         United National Party (UNP) leader Premadasa said that if he is elected president, Parliament would decide on a prime minister who commands the majority of the House.
         Premadasa and main Opposition candidate Gotabhaya Rajapaksa are in a close race for the November 16 polls. Rajapaksa has also vowed to replace Wickremesinghe with his brother and former strongman Mahinda.
         Former president Mahinda failed to win office for the third term in 2015 and a new constitutional provision on term limits bars him from running for the presidency again.
         The presidential election result in Sri Lanka would not alter the composition of parliament along with the Cabinet and the post of prime minister.
         Wickremesinghe last week said he would continue to be the prime minister even after Premadasa's win.
         Under the country's Constitution, the prime minister can be removed only through a vote of no confidence, his resignation or him being unseated from parliament.
         The presidential powers were curbed in 2015 and the president can no longer appoint ministers or remove them without the consent of the prime minister.
         The next parliamentary election is not due until August of next year, yet the president will have the option to dismiss parliament and call a snap parliamentary election after February next year.
          Premadasa's announcement on his new prime minister was made after the main Tamil party TNA extended its support to Premadasa against the main opposition runner Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
          The TNA decided last week to support Premadasa thereby delivering him crucial minority votes.
          Rajapaksa banks solely on the support from the 74 per cent Sinhala majority rural base.
         Nearly 16 million of the country's 21 million people are eligible to vote in the election. PTI CORR
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