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Analysis : Middle
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Slaughter and ethnic cleansing accelerates in Iraq
By James Cogan
19 May 2006
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The new Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, declared this
week that a government of national unity would be
announced over the weekend, comprising representatives of all
the various ethnic and sectarian factions represented in the parliament.
For the mass of the Iraqi people, both the event and the talk
of unity will be meaningless. Thousands of people are being slaughtered
every month in a vicious civil war between the Shiite fundamentalist
parties that dominate the US puppet government and rival Sunni
Islamic militias.
There has been no let-up in the frenzy of reprisals and counter-reprisals
that followed the destruction of a major Shiite mosque in February,
and the massacre of hundreds of Sunnis by Shiite militias in retaliation.
Sunni extremists are conducting a campaign of indiscriminate
terror against the Shiite population. On Sunday, six Shiite mosques
were bombed in and around the predominantly Sunni city of Baquaba.
The next day, a bus to Baquaba was pulled over by armed men. In
front of their horrified Sunni colleagues, five Shiite teachers
were dragged from the vehicle, lined up and shot in the head.
On Tuesday, five people were gunned down in the car park of a
Baghdad Shiite prayer hall. As a crowd gathered around their bodies,
a car bomb was detonated, killing another 14 people and wounding
33. The following day, at least five roadside bombs were exploded
in Shiite suburbs, killing at least four people and wounding an
unknown number more.
Shiite death squads are murdering hundreds of Sunni Iraqis
who they consider to be sympathisers of the anti-occupation insurgency
or the former Baathist regime. The main Shiite organisations being
blamed are the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(SCIRI) and the Mahdi Army militia of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
Even according to official figures, at least 762 people were killed
in Baghdad during April. While the majority of victims were Sunnis,
otherssuch as liberal intellectuals, gays and liquor sellerswere
killed because their lifestyle, beliefs or occupation were anathema
to the religious fanatics.
Many of the victims have been seized from their homes or the
streets by men dressed in the uniforms of the Shiite-dominated
Iraqi police and interior ministry commandos. Before they were
killed, many were hideously tortured. An editorial in the Iraqi
journal Azzaman noted on May 8: These killers are
not satisfied to kill their victims and then pass their bodies
to their bereaved families... The killers have currently immersed
further into sadism and criminality. They now slit the throats
of their victims, dig holes into their bodies and dump them on
the piles of garbage dotting Iraqi cities.
Residents of Sunni districts of Baghdad live in such fear of
the police and interior ministry forces that they have formed
their own militias or requested protection from Sunni guerilla
groups. At other times, Sunni leaders have appealed to Iraqi army
units made up of Sunni Arabs or ethnic Kurds to defend them. The
majority of Iraqi Kurds follow the Sunni branch of Islam. Army
units reportedly joined with a Sunni militia in the suburb of
Adhamiya last month to fight off Shiite police and militiamen
they alleged were coming into the area to destroy a mosque.
The sectarian divisions within the US-trained and equipped
Iraqi security forces led to another open clash last week in Balada
predominantly Shiite city. Kurdish troops based outside the town
who were taking a wounded soldier to the hospital were stopped
at gunpoint by members of a largely Shiite unit. The Kurds opened
fire, killing at least one of the Shiites. While the confrontation
was rapidly brought to an end, an Iraqi officer told the New
York Times: There is a big sensitivity to Kurds in this
place. The people in Balad are very Shia. They dont like
to have Kurds in this place.
Although the violence is most intense in Baghdad, it is taking
place across Iraq. In cities and towns across the country, people
living in areas where their religious denomination is a minority
are coming under both psychological and physical pressure to move
out. At least 100,000 people, mainly Shiites, have been forced
to flee from their homes by death threats.
In Basra, Iraqs second largest city, which has a predominantly
Shiite population, the Sunni minority has lived in terror since
the US invasion. Hundreds have been murdered. In a report that
journalist Steven Vincent filed with Mother Jones last
Julybefore he was murdered for documenting the activities
of Shiite death squadsa young woman told him: To be
a Sunni in Basra today is a crime.
The killing in Basra is now taking place at a level that rivals
Baghdad. A defence ministry official told the Independent
this month that one person is being assassinated every hourmore
than 600 a month. SCIRI and rival Shiite factions are fighting
one another for control of the provincial and city governments,
while at the same time continuing a bloody campaign of vengeance
against Sunnis and former members of the Baath Party.
US imperialism bears full responsibility for the ethno-religious
divisions and bloodletting. From the time of the 2003 invasion,
the US has pursued a divide-and-rule policy. It encouraged Kurdish
nationalists and Shiite fundamentalists to collaborate with the
occupation on the promise they would be able to supplant the Sunni
Arab ruling elite that the Baathist regime had rested upon. Above
all, the US occupation has offered them a small share in the wealth
that will be plundered when Iraqs massive reserves of oil
and gas are opened up to American and other international energy
corporations.
Most of the oil and gas reserves are in the predominantly Shiite
south and in areas of northern Iraq that Kurdish nationalists
claim. The new constitution that was adopted last December, therefore,
established the mechanisms for the de-facto partition of Iraq
into three or more regional governments that would
have control over all new energy production in their territory.
The three northern provinces of Iraq are already ruled by the
Kurdish Regional Government (KRG), which has signed a number of
contracts with foreign companies to begin drilling for untapped
oil.
The calculations underlying the constitution are nothing less
than murderous. While oil and gas will eventually be pumped from
relatively stable regions in the south and north, Kurdish and
Shiite security forces will assist the US military to brutally
repress the majority Sunni population in Baghdad and the central
and western provinces. The slaughter now taking place across the
country is the inevitable, and predictable, consequence.
See Also:
Helicopter downing in Basra underscores
hostility to British occupation
[12 May 2006]
Three years since Bush's "Mission
Accomplished": Torture, corruption, growing resistance in
Iraq
[2 May 2006]
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