Abu Hashim al-Ibrahim

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Abu Hashim al-Ibrahim
Third Leader of Ansar al-Islam
Assumed office
15 December 2011

Abu Hashim Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman al-Ibrahim was the third leader of Ansar al-Islam, a Salafi Jihadi group operating in Iraq, until 2014.

History[edit]

A native of Baghdad, he's a former Shia Muslim who became a Sunni, and studied Islamic law at the hands of many scholars in Baghdad, and hadith with Sabhi al-Samarra'i.[1]

Ansar al-Islam[edit]

He joined Ansar al-Islam in 2006 through Abd al-Raheem Abu Anwar, a Salafi preacher of Baghdad and close to Abu Wa'el Sa'adun al-Qadi[who?]. Abu Wa'el vouched for him.

He was working in the Shari'i investigations department affiliated with the group's Shari'a Committee and then became the right hand to Abu al-Abbas al-Kurdi, leader of the Shari'a Committee. Abu Hashim took over the Shari'i Committee in the time of Abu al-Abbas' sojourn. Later he became one of the members of the Majlis Shura, the council managing the group.

He was subject to more than one assassination attempt at the hands of the Islamic State of Iraq.[citation needed]

At some point he moved from Baghdad to Tikrit, but he was advised to depart Tikrit because foreigners stood out.[citation needed] He was living in Mosul with his family in 2008.[citation needed]

Leadership[edit]

He was elected to the leadership of Ansar al-Islam by consensus of the Majlis Shura on 15 December 2011. On 29 August 2014, he reportedly left Ansar al-Islam and defected to the Islamic State along with 50 other members and high commanders of the Ansar al-Islam organization.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi (15 December 2015), "A Complete History of Jamaat Ansar al-Islam – Translation", Middle East Forum. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  2. ^ Roggio, Bill; Joscelyn, Thomas (5 January 2012). "Ansar al Islam names new leader". The Long War Journal.