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Secrets of an Iraqi cigarette smuggler: How one man skirted death by tricking IS militants

Smoking is outlawed in the jihadist 'caliphate' of northern Iraq, so the trade can be perilous

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Hisba members prepare to burn cigarettes in Syria.Photo: AP

It was a heart-racing moment. The cigarette smuggler was stuck in line at a checkpoint as, up ahead, Islamic State militants were searching cars.

He was running a big risk: The militants have banned smoking, and lighting up is punishable with a fine or broken finger.

Selling cigarettes can be a death sentence.

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Falah Abdullah Jamil, 30, relied on his quick wits. When the fighters came to his vehicle at the checkpoint leading to his home village of Eski Mosul in northern Iraq, they asked what he had in his luggage compartment.

"Nothing," he lied.

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They popped open the compartment and found the 125 cartons of cigarettes he had brought from Rabia, a town near the border with Syria.

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