Iraqi 'Jon Stewart' defies death threats, fights IS jihadists with jokes
Comedian's jokes aim to lift the aura of fear that is one of the jihadists' strongest weapons

Defying death threats, an Iraqi television comedian is fighting the Islamic State group with biting satire aimed at lifting the aura of fear that is one of the jihadists' strongest weapons.
Two men with fake beards walk into a bar and ask for orange juice and "halal" water, with a wink and a smile to the barman who promptly serves them two glasses of alcohol.
"This round's on the caliph, to mark the first anniversary of the occupation of Mosul," the waiter says before a bomb blast cuts short his reference to IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the capture of the northern Iraqi city.
Ahmad al-Basheer, who has been likened to renowned US political satirist Jon Stewart, says he aims to "break the image" of the jihadists and their declared puritanical enforcement of sharia Islamic laws.
Millions of Iraqis tune in weekly for The Basheer Show and its diet of irreverence and no-holds-barred humour.
"Weapons are not the best solution for Iraq," he says at his studio in Amman, capital of neighbouring Jordan.