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40 Casualties in Mahdi Army clash with Sunni Arab guerrillas

by Juan Cole (reposted)
...

Sunday, March 26, 2006

40 Casualties in Mahdi Army clash with Sunni Arab guerrillas

AP reports that major clashes were fought Saturday at Mahmudiyah south of Baghdad between Mahdi Army militiamen (puritanical Shiites) and local Sunni Arab guerrillas killed or wounded about 50 persons late on Saturday. AP writes, ' Some 40 persons reportedly were killed or injured — no breakdown was immediately available — in the clash between forces of the Shia Mehdi Army militia and Sunni militants near Mahmoudiya, 30 km south of the capital, police reported. '

Six other Iraqis were killed in separate incidents, and the deaths of two US marines were announced. Police found 10 more corpses in Iraq on Saturday. These are typically young men targetted for reprisal killings because of their religious sect.

The poorly named Islamic Army of Iraq, a neo-Baathist guerrilla group, announced Saturday that it is watching journalists in that country and will act against those it [arbitrarily] deems spies.

Knight Ridder reports that even Iraqi politicians are admitting that their inability so far to form a government after the December 15 elections is making the situation in the country worse and giving an opening to the guerrillas.

Al-Sharq al-Awsat reports [Ar.] that Member of Parliament and Sadrist leader Shaikh Nasir al-Saaedi [al-Sa`idi] said Saturday that two knotty issues confront the attempt to form a government in Iraq. The first is the position of the blocs in parliament on the constitution, and respect for the electoral achievement of the political blocs that make up parliament. He said that the attempt to curb the prerogatives of those parties that actually won the election constitutes a voiding of the election outcomes and an insult to the Iraqi people who risked all to come out and vote. (Fears are being raised that the proposed "national security council" will form an unconstitutional brake on the powers of the elected government.)

He said that he and the other Sadrists are committed to Dawa Party leader Ibrahim Jaafar as the United Iraqi Alliance candidate for prime minister. He said that setting aside Jaafari risked breaking up the UIA and betraying the trust of the Iraqi people.

The Kurdistan Alliance has led a charge, supported by the Sunni Arab parties and by the Kurds to unseat Jaafari.

Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Saturday that US-Iran talks on Iraq will be conditional and limited. He told IRNA, "We essentially do not trust the Americans but we will conditionally negotiate with them about Iraq while taking into account the interests of Iraqis and the world of Islam."

I hear behind the scenes from people on the ground in Iraq. Little mainstream reporting gives a sense of the grittiness, grimness, death and destruction that they discern behind the traffic jams and the frantic shopping/ hoarding of everyday life. Kudos to Jeffrey Gettleman for telling it like it is. One remembers what a controversy it caused when Farnaz Fassihi of the Wall Street Journal let it be known in October of 2004 via an email how bad things were in Baghdad, how shocking her first-hand account seemed to many Americans who were not being given the full story by their government or their press (sometimes the latter is stenographer for the former). Gettleman's thoughtful and hard-hitting piece is sort of like Fassihi 2, except that the NYT published it and the Wall Street Journal never published Fassihi's backgrounder.

Jeffrey Gettleman also explains the practical difference between Sunnis and Shiites in Iraq.

posted by Juan @ 3/26/2006 06:30:00 AM   

§18 killed in Baghdad clash, police say
by ALJ
At least 18 Iraqis, said to be worshippers present in a Baghdad mosque, were killed on Sunday after US troops clashed with a Shia militia, medics and police said.

Police said the clashes erupted after the Mehdi Army militia loyal to cleric Moqtada al-Sadr tried to stop US troops from entering a mosque.

A medic said 18 bodies were found around the mosque.

A senior aide to Sadr accused US troops of killing more than 20 unarmed worshippers during evening prayers at a Sadr mosque in east Baghdad.

US spokesmen had no immediate comment.

Police and residents said there were clashes involving Sadr's Mehdi Army militia fighters after US troops raided the mosque in east Baghdad. Police said the troops appeared to be trying to arrest someone.

Sadr aide Hazim al-Araji said the dead were not militiamen and had been unarmed: "The American forces went into Mustafa mosque at prayers and killed more than 20 worshippers ... They tied them up and shot them."

Gruesome discovery

Also on Sunday, thirty decapitated bodies were found on a highway near the restive Iraqi city of Baqouba, northeast of Baghdad.

The police said the bodies, which have not been identified, were tossed out on the side of the road near the village of Mullah Eid, about 30km southwest of the Baqouba, notorious for its sectarian killings.

Since the dynamiting of a Shia shrine in Samarra on 22 February , large numbers of corpses have been found in Baghdad and surrounding provinces.

Bomb kills boy

A 13-year-old boy was also killed on Sunday by a roadside bomb as he walked to school in the southern city of Basra.

According to police, the boy was killed when a roadside bomb in front of his school detonated at 7.30am as pupils arrived for class on Sunday in the al-Muwafaqiya neighbourhood.

The attack is the latest in a recent series of violent acts targetting Iraqi citizens.

In Baghdad, a bomb exploded in front of a house in the central neighbourhood of Karradah, killing one woman, wounding two of her sisters and a man next door. A truck driver was gunned down in west Baghdad.

In Samarra, the US and Iraqi forces arrested the imam of al-Rabat mosque in a raid on his house.

Police discovered a total of 13 handcuffed and bullet-riddled bodies, all believed to be victims of execution-style killings.

More attacks

Ten were found in the Dora area of south Baghdad, another in the northern district of Hurriyah and two in the city of Baquoba, 60km northeast of Baghdad.

Iraqi officials and police continue to be targets as well.

Security guards working for the Iraqi finance minister were attacked while driving to pick the minister up in western Baghdad. One guard was killed and a bystander wounded, police said.

In a similar incident, guards were wounded in a bomb attack on their way to pick up the mayor of Baqouba.

Several gunmen killed a police officer and his cousin as they walked in a region 25km north of Baqouba, and a farmer was killed in the nearby town of Buhriz.

A group of visiting US politicians led by the Republican senator John McCain voiced alarm a day earlier about increasing sectarian violence in Iraq and told political leaders that American patience was growing thin and that they needed to urgently overcome their stalemate to form a national unity government.

US unease

It was the second high-level US delegation in less than a week delivering the same message as the Bush administration strives to overcome the political impasse that threatens the start of a possible American troop pullout this summer.

More
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/351D2395-2E26-4062-875D-201DA5A111A8.htm
§Amid confusion, Iraq Shi'ites accuse US troops
by reposted
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Politicians from Iraq's Shi'ite majority accused U.S. troops of massacring 20 worshippers at a Baghdad mosque on Sunday but police and residents said many died in clashes between Shi'ite militia fighters and Americans.

U.S. military spokesmen declined comment on the accusations but issued a statement describing a raid by Iraqi special forces, with U.S. advisers, on a building that was not a mosque in roughly the same area. It said 16 insurgents were killed.

Police said U.S. forces clashed with the Mehdi Army militia of radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, killing 20 fighters.

With Baghdad under night curfew it was impossible to pin down what happened. But unusually strident anti-U.S. coverage on government-run state television showed a fierce confrontation between the ruling Shi'ite Islamists and the U.S. administration.

A spokesman for Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said the premier was "deeply concerned" and had called the U.S. commander in Iraq, General George Casey, who said there would be a full inquiry.

Also on Sunday, U.S. forces arrested 41 officials from the Shi'ite-controlled Interior Ministry and freed 17 foreigners from a secret jail, government, political and U.S. sources said.

Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi troops found 30 bodies, many of them beheaded, on a village street. And in the same area around Baquba, police arrested one of their own majors, the brother of the regional police chief, over Shi'ite death squad killings.

More
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060327/ts_nm/iraq_dc
§ Many dead in Baghdad mosque raid
by BBC (reposted)
At least 16 people have been killed in a raid on a mosque in Baghdad where militants loyal to Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr were based, reports say.

Aides to Mr Sadr say US forces led the raid on a mosque, while the US says Iraqi troops ran it with US support.

"No mosques were entered or damaged during this operation," the US military said in a statement.

In a second raid, US troops arrested more than 40 Interior Ministry staff said to be guarding a secret prison.

Earlier on Sunday, Iraqi security forces found 30 bodies - many of them beheaded - near the town of Baquba.

'Unarmed'

In Baghdad, an aide to Mr Sadr accused the US of killing unarmed people at the mosque.

"The American forces went into Mustafa mosque at prayers and killed more than 20 worshippers," Hazim al-Araji told Reuters news agency.

But the US military statement denied that any troops had entered the mosque and said the US special forces troops were on hand only as advisers to the Iraqi troops.

"Iraqi Special Operations Forces conducted a twilight raid in the Aadhamiya neighbourhood in northeast Baghdad to disrupt a terrorist cell responsible for conducting attacks on Iraqi security and Coalition Forces and kidnapping Iraqi civilians in the local area," the statement said.

It said 16 people had been killed. Iraqi police said 22 had died.

More
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4847638.stm
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