Al-Arabiya:

The Iraqi government toughened its position towards pro-Iran faction Kata’ib Hezbollah on Saturday, announcing some members would be tried over a recent deadly clash and others had been stripped of their commands.

The decision follows an attack on a government office in south Baghdad late last month that killed three people, including a policeman, and which the authorities blamed on the group.

Like other armed groups trained by Iran during the war against ISIS, Kata’ib Hezbollah or Hezbollah Brigades were integrated into the regular security forces as part of the Hashed al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilization) force.

However, the faction has developed a reputation for sometimes acting on its own.

Iraq’s Joint Operations Command previously said that more than a dozen suspects were detained over the July 27 attack on an agriculture ministry office, which was prompted by the sacking of the director.

Saturday’s government statement said the suspects were “fighters belonging to Hezbollah Brigades and affiliated to Regiments 45 and 46 of the Hashed al-Shaabi.”

It charged that the attack on the ministry’s office had been led by the former director.

“In addition to being implicated in several cases of corruption,” the suspected ringleader stood accused of “falsifying official documents, certificates and contracts so that farmland could be confiscated from its legitimate owners,” the statement said.

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