
Iraqi researcher Dr. Tawana Elias wins award in Sweden for cancer prevention research
Dr. Elias, who earned his PhD from Sweden's renowned Karolinska Institute after graduating from Salahaddin University in Iraq, presented research on an innovative laboratory model that mimics natural breast cell behavior. This model aids in evaluating a potential preventative hormonal drug for women at extremely high genetic risk (up to 75%) of breast cancer, offering a possible alternative to preventative surgeries.
The research, involving an initial 50 participants over three months, yielded encouraging results, demonstrating – reportedly for the first time globally – the drug's potential for breast cancer prevention in this high-risk group. Dr. Elias stated work is underway to expand the study.
He credits his education, including support from Salahaddin University and the KRG for his studies at Karolinska, and his dedication to science for this achievement, aiming to serve patients and advance human progress.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Iraqi News
15 hours ago
- Iraqi News
Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council closes Dr. Ban Ziyad's case, rules death a suicide
Baghdad ( – Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council announced today, Monday (August 18, 2025), the closure of the investigation into the death of Dr. Ban Ziyad, concluding that the incident was a suicide. The decision, which comes after weeks of public debate and speculation, was based on an investigation led by the Basra Appeals Court. The Council explained that the Basra Appeals Court Presidency sent the final decision on Dr. Ban Ziyad's death to the head of the Supreme Judicial Council. The findings of the investigation pointed to suicide, leading to the official closure of the case. The Council's statement noted that the doctor's parents, sister, uncle, aunt, cousin, and brother all confirmed that she committed suicide due to 'overwhelming psychological pressures.' The report detailed that the doctor had been diagnosed with depression and was under the care of specialized psychiatrists in Baghdad, receiving treatment with the drug Bupropion. The medical experts' reports indicated that her condition could lead to suicide if she failed to adhere to her treatment or succumbed to negative thoughts. A close associate, Mustafa Naji Safaa, also testified that Dr. Ban had previously shared her suicidal thoughts with him. The investigation also acknowledged the existence of recorded verbal disputes between the doctor and a suspect, 'Omar Dhahi.' However, the case has been a matter of intense public scrutiny since the death of the young Iraqi doctor and social media content creator on Monday, August 4. Many Iraqis, particularly in her home city of Basra, have openly questioned the suicide narrative and have called for an independent murder investigation. This public skepticism has been fueled by claims from her colleagues that she did not suffer from psychological problems and by leaked forensic reports regarding the nature of the wounds on her body. While the family has maintained that her death was a suicide, many sympathetic to the late doctor have appeared on local television to challenge this version of events. The Ministry of Health and the Doctors' Syndicate of Iraq have so far offered only condolences, while the Basra police have stated they will release their investigation results upon completion.


Iraq Business
a day ago
- Iraq Business
Apex Health to Develop 400-Bed Baghdad International Hospital
By John Lee. Apex Health, a subsidiary of Qatar's Estithmar Holding, has announced that it has obtained an investment licence from Iraq's National Investment Commission (NIC) to develop a 400-bed private hospital in Baghdad's Al-Zaafaraniyah district (formerly Al-Rashid Camp). The new facility, to be named Baghdad International Hospital, will be built on a 100,000-square-metre riverside site overlooking the Tigris. It will include 400 beds, 16 ICU beds, 12 operating rooms, and 80 outpatient clinics, and is expected to handle more than 600,000 outpatient visits and over 100,000 inpatient admissions annually. According to a press release from the company, the hospital will provide advanced medical and surgical services, including open-heart, orthopedic oncology, plastic, neurosurgery, pediatric surgery, and transplant programmes (liver, bone marrow, and stem cell). It will also offer dialysis, neonatal care, and a full continuum of inpatient and outpatient services. Apex Health is already active in Iraq, managing Al Nasiriya Teaching Hospital in Dhi Qar and Al Imam Al Hassan Mujtaba Teaching Hospital in Karbala. CEO Joseph Hazel said the new project demonstrates the company's confidence in the Iraqi market and commitment to supporting healthcare transformation in the country. Estithmar Holding CEO Juan Leon added that the development aligns with the group's international growth strategy and will deliver added value to shareholders. (Source: Estithmar Holding)


Shafaq News
3 days ago
- Shafaq News
Iraq's higher education enters the AI era: Promise and obstacles
Shafaq News Artificial Intelligence (AI) has shifted from futuristic theory to global necessity, reshaping economies, public services, and knowledge systems. Iraq, emerging from decades of conflict and institutional fragility, is now taking measured steps into this transformation. The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research has announced the establishment of two new colleges at the University of Baghdad: the College of Excellence and the College of Artificial Intelligence. Both are expected to open in the 2025–2026 academic year, a move that signals a decisive turn in Iraq's higher education modernization. The College of Excellence will cover a wide range of fields, from data science and e-business management to banking, philosophy, and sociology. The College of Artificial Intelligence will focus on engineering applications, biomedical technologies, and big data analytics. The ministry has set an August 20 deadline to finalize logistics and faculty appointments, with admissions rules tailored to attract high-achieving students. For Minister Naeem Abd Yaser al-Aboudi, the project goes beyond bureaucratic restructuring. It is an attempt to align Iraqi academia with global technological shifts and prepare graduates for a digital economy increasingly reliant on advanced tools. The University of Baghdad is not alone in experimenting with AI programs. The University of Warith al-Anbiyaa in Karbala has already launched an artificial intelligence department that has drawn wide student interest. The Middle Technical University in Baghdad has introduced courses in cybersecurity and AI, while the American University of Baghdad recently secured international funding to establish an Innovation Lab dedicated to digital intelligence and engineering. Even Al-Iraqia University has incorporated AI into its media faculty through a new department of AI journalism. Together, these initiatives suggest the early formation of an academic ecosystem that could push Iraq toward the digital age. Policymakers argue that the task now is to transform scattered efforts into a structured national program. Firas al-Muslmawi, a member of the parliamentary Higher Education Committee, told Shafaq News the new colleges should become models to be replicated nationwide, with unified curricula forming the backbone of Iraq's future AI education. He emphasized that the technology's applications in medicine, planning, and knowledge production justify embedding it firmly into universities. Academics, however, caution that ambition must be matched by capacity. Alaa Najah, professor at the University of Baghdad's College of Media, welcomed the new colleges as a necessary first step but noted their success hinges on infrastructure, electricity, and qualified faculty. Iraq, he argued, must not only train its own instructors but also recruit expertise from abroad. 'Iraq must not only train its own instructors but also draw on expertise from abroad. If we do not keep pace with modern technologies, we will be technologically illiterate,' Najah warned. Students, meanwhile, see AI studies as a route out of Iraq's stagnant labor market. Hassan Sarmad al-Ghazi told Shafaq News he intends to apply to the College of Artificial Intelligence to secure a stable future without relying on public-sector employment. Israa Ibrahim expressed optimism that digital skills could open doors to remote work with international firms or higher-paying jobs in domestic industry. The expansion of AI education cannot be separated from Iraq's broader national strategy. The state's first major steps in AI came in security, where rising cyber threats pushed the Ministry of Interior to establish a Cybersecurity Directorate in 2022. That body, under Brigadier General Hassan Hadi Lazeez, now manages digital forensics and AI-based threat detection. Thousands of personnel have received training. In 2024, the government drafted a National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence, known as INSAI, designed to integrate AI across healthcare, agriculture, tourism, and education. The University of Baghdad's new colleges can thus be seen as higher education's contribution to this strategy. Despite this momentum, serious obstacles remain. Educational technology expert Dr. Mohammad Awada told Shafaq News that while internet penetration now exceeds 80 percent, network stability is weak and frequent shutdowns — often during exam periods — undermine digital services. 'Many universities lack reliable electricity and modern laboratories, with some schools relying on solar solutions provided by aid agencies,' Awada said, adding that brain drain continues to weaken the talent pool, leaving institutions short of qualified faculty in AI and related disciplines. Just as concerning, Iraq has yet to develop a legal and ethical framework to govern AI deployment, raising questions about research integrity and data security. International studies confirm both the potential and the limitations. Research on Iraqi universities suggests AI-based teaching can improve classroom performance, but stress the need for institutional support and sustained funding. At Al-Nahrain University, faculty members have voiced support for integrating AI into pedagogy, seeing it as a way to move beyond teaching methods long criticized as rigid and outdated. Regionally, Iraq is still in the early stages compared with the UAE, Saudi Arabia, or even neighboring Iran and Turkiye, all of which have national AI strategies already underway. The UAE launched the world's first Ministry of Artificial Intelligence in 2017, Saudi Arabia's SDAIA oversees large-scale AI investment, while Iran continues to fund AI research despite sanctions. Against this backdrop, Baghdad's initiative may appear modest, but it is significant. It reflects recognition that exclusion from the AI ecosystem would deepen Iraq's marginalization and dependence.