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Sectarian violence engulfs Iraq following mosque bombing
By James Cogan
24 February 2006
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The bombing of the Al-Askariya mosque in the city of Samarra
on Wednesday is a deliberate provocation that has immediately
unleashed widespread sectarian violence and threatens to take
US-occupied Iraq to a new level of savagery and barbarism.
No organisation has claimed responsibility, though Sunni extremists
aligned with Al Qaeda are suspected. What is known is that a squad
of men dressed in police uniforms entered the shrine in the early
hours of the morning and overcame the mosque guards. At dawn,
they detonated explosives that had been rigged in such a fashion
as to collapse the entire building. The famous golden dome of
the 1,000-year-old mosquewhich was erected in 1905 and was
one of the landmarks of modern Iraqwas reduced to rubble.
It was a particularly provocative act. Shiites regard Al-Askariya
as one of the four holiest sites. Two ninth century Shiite saints
are buried there. According to Shiite theology, it is where Mohammad
al-Mahdi, the 12th and last imam, will return and restore justice
after a time of great evil. The movement headed by cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr, which has its base among Iraqs urban poor, calls
its militia the Mahdi Army after the saint and preaches
that his return is imminent.
The destruction of Al-Askariya has brought tens of thousands
of Shiite youth onto the streets, vowing to exact retribution
on Sunnis and the US-led occupation forces. The Mahdi Army and
the Badr Brigade militia of the Shiite Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) have taken over entire suburbs
of Baghdad, Basra, Amarra, Najaf, Karbala, Nasiriya and other
southern Iraqi cities. Shiites have demonstrated across the country.
In Najaf, a mass demonstration outside the home of leading Shiite
cleric Ali al-Sistani repeatedly chanted: Rise up Shiites.
Take revenge!
Shiite militias are terrorising the Sunni population. Over
the past 48 hours, dozens of Sunni mosques across Iraq have been
machine-gunned or desecrated in other ways. At least two were
burnt to the ground in Baghdad. According to the Sunni Association
of Muslim Scholars (AMS), 168 Sunni mosques have been attacked,
10 Sunni clerics murdered and 15 others kidnapped since the bombing.
In Basra, 10 Sunni prisoners suspected of attacks on Shiites were
dragged from their cells and handed over to militiamen. Their
bodies were found later in various parts of the city. The overall
death toll since Wednesday is at least 130.
US President George Bush has issued sanctimonious calls for
an end to violence in Iraq. The fact is, however, that Washington
is directly responsible for the extreme tensions that now threaten
to plunge the Iraqi people into the nightmare of civil war.
Ever since the illegal invasion of Iraq, US occupation authorities
have elevated explicitly sectarian formations. The various puppet
governments since 2003 have been based on the Kurdish nationalists,
who aspire to establish a separate state in the north, and Shiite
fundamentalist parties such as SCIRI, which aspires to establish
an Iranian-style Shiite theocracy over the traditionally secular
population.
After Shiite parties assumed the dominant role in the Baghdad
regime in April 2005, SCIRI has used its control over the US-trained
Iraqi security forces to unleash death squads against former members
of the Baath Party, Sunni political opponents, scientists, academics,
womens rights advocates and critical journalists. This campaign
of terror has been carried with the tacit approval of the US as
one of the means for intimidating and silencing opponents of the
occupation.
At the same time, the US military has waged its own brutal
repression in Sunni areas where armed resistance to the US occupation
has been concentrated. Thousands of Sunni men have been killed
or detained in prisons such as Abu Ghraib, where they were subjected
to torture and abuse. The inevitable rebellions in predominantly
Sunni cities such as Fallujah, Ramadi, Samarra and Mosul have
been mercilessly crushed.
The result is that the Sunni population is embittered and marginalised.
Organisations such as Al Qaeda have been able to win an audience
for their reactionary sectarian claims that all Shiites are collaborators
with the US occupation, and recruit disaffected Sunnis to carry
out horrific attacks on Shiite civilians and religious sites.
Now, after using the Shiite parties to assist in the repression
of Sunnis, the Bush administration is attempting to substantially
reduce their influence in the next government. Washington is steadily
escalating tensions with Iran and does not want the armed forces
of its puppet regime in Iraq to be directed by Shiite factions
with close links to Tehran. The US ambassador in Iraq, Zalmay
Khalilzad, repeated his demand on Monday that the defence and
interior ministries had to be given to non-sectarian
and non-militia-related individualsa clear ultimatum
that Shiite leaders were unacceptable.
The US intention is to install Sunni leaders and former Baathist
officials into key government positions in the hope that sections
of the insurgency will end their armed struggle. Khalilzads
statement has simply heightened sectarian tensions. SCIRI immediately
threatened to resist any return to power of individuals who had
positions in Husseins regime or security apparatus.
First-hand reports published on blogs and news groups give
some sense of the volatility and uncertainty that now exists in
Iraq.
Riverbend, a young Sunni woman in Baghdad, wrote
yesterday: There has been gunfire all over Baghdad since
morning... Extreme Shia are blaming extreme Sunnis and Iraq seems
to be falling apart at the seams under foreign occupiers and local
fanatics... No one went to work today... The situation isnt
good at all. I dont think I remember things being this tenseeveryone
is just watching and waiting quietly... Several mosques have been
taken over by the Mahdi militia and the Badr people seem to be
everywhere. Tomorrow, no-one is going to work or college, or anywhere.
People are scared and watchful. We can only pray.
In an article in the British Telegraph, journalist Ahmad
Ali described from Baghdad that his family had fled their home
in a mixed Sunni-Shiite suburb due to fear of revenge attacks
by Shiite fundamentalists.
He wrote: The Shia are crazy about this [the mosque bombing].
I am Sunni and I am frightened that if I do not go somewhere to
be surrounded by those who can protect me then they make take
out their anger on me. We were not alone on the roads. There were
many cars with families in them. Then even more surprisingly there
was the sight of the black-shirted followers of Moqtada al-Sadr
with their Kalashnikovs at many of the street corners. There were
police out as well but they are standing with them... I have seen
such a thing before in Najaf but never in Baghdad. It frightened
my wife. There is the smell of civil war everywhere,
she said to me.
With violence spreading across the country, the government
Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafarihimself a Shiite fundamentalistdeclared
an unprecedented day and night curfew yesterday. The announcement
will do little to reassure Sunni communities. Most of the Iraqi
soldiers and police are Shiite. The British Times reported,
for example, that Iraqi troops had cheered and waved
as militiamen raked a Sunni mosque with bullets. American troops
have taken up positions in major Sunni suburbs and at key religious
sites in Baghdad, just days after most of the capital was ceremoniously
handed-over to a predominantly Shiite division of
the new Iraqi military.
Other Shiite religious and political leaders have made desperate
appeals for calm. At the same time, however, they have felt compelled
to solidarise themselves with the Shiite outrage which they have
little ability to stem.
Sistani allowed himself to be filmed for the first time in
a television appeal for an end to sectarian violence but issued
a statement calling on believers to express their protest
through peaceful means. In what has been interpreted as
endorsement of the mobilisation of the Shiite militias, Sistani
also declared that if the government could not defend Shiite holy
sites, then the faithful must be able to do it with the
help of God.
Moqtada al-Sadr cancelled a visit to Jordan and is attempting
to regain control over his movement. In a statement yesterday,
he declared the Mahdi Armywhich is believed to have carried
out many of the revenge attackswould protect Sunni holy
sites as well as Shiite. Reflecting broad hostility among ordinary
Shiites to the US occupation, Sadrist spokesmen have blamed Americans
and Zionists for the destruction of Al-Askariya.
In a similar vein, SCIRI leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim accused
Zalmay Khalilzad, the US ambassador in Iraq, of fomenting the
attack on the Shiite shrine. He described Khalilzads thinly-veined
criticism of SCIRI control over the interior ministry as a green
light to terrorist groups to attack Shiites. Therefore,
Hakim declared, he [Khalilzad] shares part of the responsibility
for the bombing of Al-Askariya.
Talks toward the formation of a new national unity
government have already collapsed. Sunni parties withdrew yesterday,
demanding that the Shiite alliance apologise for the attacks on
Sunni mosques. The new Iraqi parliament was scheduled to convene
this weekend for the first time since the December 15, 2005 ballot,
with its first task being the election of the president and two
vice-presidents who must nominate a prime minister. Amid the escalating
sectarian violence, it is uncertain whether the session will even
sit.
See Also:
Intrigues continue to stall new Iraqi
government
[17 February 2006]
US machinations in Iraq delay formation
of government
[2 February 2006]
After the Iraq election:
Washington steps in to shape the next government
[21 December 2005]
Iraq: a reactionary
call for "war" on Shiites
[26 September 2005]
Iraq: A convenient
letter from an Al Qaeda terrorist
[17 February 2004]
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