Outcry in Iraq over TV show with fake ISIS fighters

A TV show has sparked outrage in Iraq after featuring fake ISIS fighters who ‘kidnap’ celebrities, strap fake suicide vests to them and tell them they will be executed. 

In the show, terrified celebrities are taken to visit Iraqi families supposedly displaced after fleeing from extremists

But once there, the duped participants are ambushed by fake jihadists and told they will be killed – until ‘troops’ come to the rescue and bring their ordeal to an end.

In one example, a woman is fitted with a fake suicide vest, while another celebrity was blind-folded and filmed begging for his life.  

What looks like a close shave is, in fact, a candid camera-style television show airing during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan that takes tricking celebrities for laughs to a new level. And it’s causing a scandal in Iraq, along with accusations of bad taste.

A TV show in Iraq has sparked outcry over fake ISIS fighters 'kidnapping' celebrities, strapping fake suicide vests to them and telling them they will be executed

A TV show in Iraq has sparked outcry over fake ISIS fighters ‘kidnapping’ celebrities, strapping fake suicide vests to them and telling them they will be executed

A terrified participant on the show is pictured with a fake suicide vest strapped to her

A terrified participant on the show is pictured with a fake suicide vest strapped to her 

A camera follows a celebrity visiting an Iraqi family displaced by conflict, when they're ambushed by jihadists

A camera follows a celebrity visiting an Iraqi family displaced by conflict, when they’re ambushed by jihadists

The scene is the same every time: a celebrity, invited for a charitable project, visits the home of a family said to have escaped the clutches of the Islamic State (IS) group.

Once inside, actors disguised as jihadists pounce. The jihadists may be fake, but the pleas of the trapped celebrities are very real.

When star footballer Alaa Mhawi appeared on the show called ‘Tanneb Rislan’, he found himself on his knees, blindfolded, begging for his life.

‘I’m your brother, I’m Iraqi and I represent the whole nation,’ he shouts, on the verge of tears.

But once the ruse is revealed, the celebrities can’t complain too much.

The series is underwritten by the powerful state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary coalition.

The woman is led by two men after having a fake suicide vest strapped to her

The woman is led by two men after having a fake suicide vest strapped to her 

What looks like a close shave is, in fact, a candid camera-style television show airing during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan that takes tricking celebrities for laughs to a new level

What looks like a close shave is, in fact, a candid camera-style television show airing during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan that takes tricking celebrities for laughs to a new level

The scene is the same every time: a celebrity, invited for a charitable project, visits the home of a family said to have escaped the clutches of the Islamic State (IS) group. Once inside, actors disguised as jihadists pounce.

The scene is the same every time: a celebrity, invited for a charitable project, visits the home of a family said to have escaped the clutches of the Islamic State (IS) group. Once inside, actors disguised as jihadists pounce.

Its fighters were central to a grinding military campaign that by mid-2017 had dislodged IS from the string of cities it seized three years earlier. 

And these paramilitaries, still armed, have their own role in the show, saving the day.

At the end of the episode featuring Mhawi, the international footballer also had to suffer a professional putdown.

‘You fly the Iraqi flag on the football pitch, but the Hashed, the army and police, they do it by sacrificing martyrs,’ the presenter said.

Nessma, an actress in her fifties, didn’t plead for her life. Instead, she passed out after a fake explosive belt was strapped to her waist.

The series is underwritten by the powerful state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary coalition

The series is underwritten by the powerful state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary coalition

'This isn't entertainment,' Bilal al-Mosuli, a resident of Mosul, the self-proclaimed 'capital' of IS in Iraq from 2014 to 2017, wrote on Twitter

‘This isn’t entertainment,’ Bilal al-Mosuli, a resident of Mosul, the self-proclaimed ‘capital’ of IS in Iraq from 2014 to 2017, wrote on Twitter

She stayed unconscious for several minutes until the presenter, in Hashed uniform, emptied a bottle of water on her face.

‘This isn’t entertainment,’ Bilal al-Mosuli, a resident of Mosul, the self-proclaimed ‘capital’ of IS in Iraq from 2014 to 2017, wrote on Twitter.

Another Iraqi, Ahmed Abderradi, expressed disbelief at the show on Facebook.

‘Next year, we’ll have Saddam’, he joked bitterly, referring to the dictator who terrorised Iraqis from 1979 to 2003, Saddam Hussein.

‘Or we can throw guests into a river like the victims of Speicher,’ he wrote, referring to the 2014 Camp Speicher massacre, when IS executed 1,700 Shiite conscripts and dumped their bodies in the Tigris. 

For years, entrapping stars has become a staple of primetime Ramadan shows on Arab satellite channels.

But this is the first time an Iraqi programme has combined the formula with ‘terrorism’, which is still a real threat in Iraq.

The programme also broadcasts mock executions and shootings 'with blanks', according to a disclaimer at the start

The programme also broadcasts mock executions and shootings ‘with blanks’, according to a disclaimer at the start

‘I don’t see what pleasure you could get watching these people being tortured in this way,’ another viewer wrote on social media.

The programme also broadcasts mock executions and shootings ‘with blanks’, according to a disclaimer at the start.

For others, however, the show salutes anti-IS fighters.

‘But it’s possible to show the bravery of the Hashed and Iraqi troops without introducing terrorism,’ tweeted Noor Ghazi, an Iraqi living in the United States.

Jihadist violence is still a fact of life in Iraq.

The home of the so-called displaced family in the show is located in the agricultural belt outside Baghdad where IS sleeper cells still intimidate and extort locals.

According to social media user Hamed al-Daamy, ‘the show is giving free advertising to IS and other terrorist groups’.

A writer of the show, Dargham Abu Rghif, has sprung to its defence.

‘The scenes are harsh but… if IS had won, artists would have had a far harder life, and all Iraqis too,’ he wrote on Facebook.

source: dailymail.co.uk