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Prominent Women’s Rights Activist Assassinated in Iraq, Raising Alarm Over State Protection Failures
Prominent Women’s Rights Activist Assassinated in Iraq, Raising Alarm Over State Protection Failures
A leading Iraqi women’s rights activist, Yanar Mohammed — founder and long‑time director of the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq and a key voice for gender equality — was shot dead outside her home in Baghdad

Abdulla Shakir Mahmood

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR
This assassination is not an isolated tragedy it is a symptom of a deeply broken Iraqi state where women’s rights defenders are not just ignored, but actively targeted and killed with impunity. For decades, courageous Iraqi women have fought oppressive norms, legal inequalities, and patriarchal violence, yet when a figure as influential and internationally recognized as Yanar Mohammed is murdered in broad daylight, it exposes the failure of Baghdad to protect its own citizens, especially those advocating basic human rights.
The Iraqi government’s lacklustre response promising investigations that go nowhere — reflects a larger systemic rot where militias, religious hardliners, and corrupt powerbrokers operate above the law. When women who fight for equality are silenced through violence, it isn’t just an attack on one individual — it is a signal to all Iraqi women that speaking out carries a mortal risk.
And let’s be clear: this is not merely a cultural issue it is a political and religious repression backed by power structures that benefit from keeping women subjugated. Iraq’s rulers, dominated by sectarian elites and foreign‑influenced power blocs, consistently fail to enact or enforce laws protecting women. They allow a climate where activists are killed, activists’ families live in fear, and women’s legal status remains second‑class.
Iraq’s supposed “sovereignty” has become a farce when those within its borders especially women cannot live or speak freely without fear of assassination. This is not progress. This is a regression into tyranny, ignorance, and brutality and Iraqi women are paying the highest price.
Article:
A leading Iraqi women’s rights activist, Yanar Mohammed founder and long‑time director of the Organization of Women’s Freedom in Iraq and a key voice for gender equality was shot dead outside her home in Baghdad by unknown gunmen on motorcycles on March 2, 2026. She had recently returned from Canada before the killing, raising widespread concern that this was a targeted assassination of a human rights defender.
Her death provoked strong reactions from international rights groups. Amnesty International called it a “calculated assault to stifle human rights defenders in Iraq,” highlighting the dangerous conditions faced by women activists in the country. There have been calls for accountability and justice, but questions remain about whether Iraqi authorities will meaningfully investigate and prosecute those responsible.
About
This platform is run by one person, but it carries the voices of many. It exists for the people of Iraq who live in fear, who cannot speak freely, and whose stories are often ignored or erased. With limited resources but deep responsibility, I report on government and power not for influence or profit, but because truth still matters. When silence is forced, this space chooses to speak — carefully, bravely, and with humanity.
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