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"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good enjoining what is right and forbidding what is wrong; they are the ones to attain felicity".
(surah Al-Imran,ayat-104)
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BAGHDAD, Oct. 4 "” The Iraqi Interior Ministry has suspended an entire Iraqi police brigade on suspicions that some members may have permitted, or even participated in, death squad killings, American military and Iraqi government officials said Wednesday.
The move was seen as the furthest Iraqi officials have ever come toward tackling the festering problem of militias thought to be operating within the ranks of its own largely Shiite forces.
The suspension involved the transfer of about 800 special police commandos out of their base in the Aalam neighborhood in western Baghdad to a training site north of the capital. The troops were not disarmed, according to an Iraqi Interior Ministry spokesman, but two of their most senior commanders were detained.
American officials have been pressing the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki for months to take action against the militias, but they have proved difficult to dislodge, in part because so many are affiliated with Iraqi political parties. His interior minister, Jawad al-Bolani, was appointed for his relative independence from the parties, but as a result he lacks essential political backing to enforce his will.
Murders and executions carried out by the death squads are the main cause of Iraqi deaths now, according to the American military. Putting a stop to the killings is at the heart of American military policy.
Deaths of American troops continued to rise, with six more announced by the military on Wednesday, five of them in Baghdad. American deaths have spiked recently as the military sweeps Baghdad, home to a quarter of Iraq's population of some 25 million, trying to bring the violence under control. The deaths bring the total troops who have died since Saturday to 23.
The suspended unit is the 8th Brigade Second Division of the Iraqi national police, which is known by its nickname, Falcon. It fell under suspicion after a large-scale kidnapping was carried out largely unhindered in its area of operation on Sunday, an Interior Ministry spokesman said. In that case, 26 workers were marched out of a frozen food factory in the Amel neighborhood. The bodies of at least 10 of them were found soon after.
The brigade "did nothing to follow the kidnappers or fight them," said the spokesman, Brig. Gen. Abdul Karim Khalaf, and so Mr. Bolani removed the brigade commander and a battalion commander on Tuesday, he said.
Iraqi officials said the brigade commander, Najim Juma al-Eqabi, was under review for management failings, and that the battalion commander, who was not identified, had been taken into police custody, apparently under suspicion of deeper involvement.
Justice for those implicated in sectarian killings and abuse has been elusive in the past, and it remains to be seen whether suspicions about the unit or its commanders will result in legal action. Arrest warrants for 52 Iraqis, including one division commander, have been issued, but none so far have been carried out. It was not clear on Wednesday night whether the two commanders were among them.
Mass kidnappings have become relatively common, but this is the first time the Iraqi government has taken any kind of serious action against official forces that should have prevented or responded to one.
"It's significant to take a whole brigade offline," said Mathew Sherman, a former senior State Department adviser to the Interior Ministry. "They have finally collected enough intelligence, and enough U.S. pressure has been exerted, that they are taking action."
Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, the chief American military spokesman in Iraq, said the unit had been operating in an area where American sweeps had not reduced the number of killings. The brigade operated in the neighborhoods of Bayaa, Saidiya, Amel, and Turath, General Khalaf said.
General Caldwell, who announced the unit's suspension at a news conference on Wednesday, said, "There is clear evidence that there was some complicity in allowing death-squad elements to move freely when in fact they were supposed to have been impeding their movement, that perhaps they did not respond as rapidly when reports were made."
An American military official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that some of the members of the unit had been directly implicated in death-squad killings.
The war here has evolved from spectacular suicide bombings with heavy fatalities carried out mainly by Sunni radicals to secret neighborhood revenge killings done by death squads of both sects. The Shiites squads have posed a particularly difficult challenge, in part because they have infiltrated the forces of the government itself. Sunni Arab detainees have long charged that Shiites seeking revenge are operating torture chambers in Interior Ministry prisons. Shiites in the ministry have said such allegations are exaggerated.
A human rights report published by the United Nations mission in Iraq found clear evidence of systematic abuse and torture at a prison in eastern Baghdad known as Site 4, where more than 1,400 prisoners were reported to be crowded into a small area. American officials have been pressing the Iraqi government to bring those responsible to justice.
One American lever of last resort is the Leahy Law, which prohibits the financing of foreign security forces that commit "gross violations of human rights" and are not brought to justice. American officials have acknowledged that they have warned the Iraqi government that aid might be curtailed if it does not comply.
General Caldwell also announced some progress in the effort against Sunni Arab insurgents. The driver and personal assistant of Abu Ayyub al-Masri, an Egyptian who has been identified by the American military as the new leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, was captured in Baghdad on Sept. 28. General Caldwell said the man was suspected of having helped plan the bombings of two hotels in Baghdad last year, the Sheraton and the Hamra.
On Wednesday, at least 14 Iraqis were killed and more than 80 wounded in and around Baghdad, most in a triple bomb attack on an Interior Ministry convoy. The minister was not injured, but three of his guards were killed, officials said. A suicide bomber detonated near an Iraqi Army base in Ramadi, in western Iraq, killing only himself, Reuters reported.
Qais Mizher contributed reporting.



Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
 Reply:   US Now Using Militias to Enfor
Replied by(Ghost) Replied on (5/Oct/2006)
Reports of the setting-up of U.S.-backed Sunni militias have brought new uncertainty to deepening chaos within Iraq.
by Dahr Jamail
With Ali al-Fadhily

RAMADI - Reports of the setting-up of U.S.-backed Sunni militias have brought new uncertainty to deepening chaos within Iraq.
Some Sunni leaders from the troubled al-Anbar province west of Baghdad recently met away from their tribes to set up new militias, according to local reports.
These new armed groups have received early praise from Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and U.S. officials. The United States had earlier called for the disarming of all militias for the sake of social peace and reconciliation, but that policy has clearly changed. The occupation forces now back both Shia and Sunni militias in different areas of the country.
These new groups are drawing strong condemnation from other Sunni tribal chiefs.
"They are a group of thieves who are arming thieves, and this is something dangerous and nasty," Sheik Sa'adoon, chief of a large Sunni tribe near Khaldiyah in al-Anbar, told IPS. "This only means we will have more disturbances here, and it could create local civil war."
Another tribal leader in the area, speaking to IPS on condition of anonymity, said "they are only doing this in order to kill as many Sunnis as possible, and this time with Sunni hands."
He said true tribal leaders should lead any militias they form, rather than issue orders from the Green Zone, the U.S. and Iraqi government enclave in Baghdad.
"Leaders should lead their soldiers on the battlefield, but those so-called sheiks are well protected behind concrete walls inside the dirty zone [Green Zone]," he said. "How can they win a battle by remote control?"
The controversial move appears to have brought widespread condemnation also from academics, Iraqi military leaders, and even Shia politicians. "It is a new way of making millions of dollars," a professor at al-Anbar University in Ramadi told IPS.
Brig. Gen. Jassim Rashid al-Dulaimi from the new Iraqi army in Anbar province told IPS: "I cannot imagine 30,000 more guns in the Iraqi field. I hope they will reject the idea. Iraq needs more engineers and clean politicians to solve the dilemma of the existing militias rather than recruiting new ones to kill more Iraqis. The idea sounds to me as turning the country into a mercenary recruitment center."
Shia leader Jaafar al-Assadi said the move will bring more violence. "Al-Anbar will fight even more now with the guns given to those fools," he told IPS. "They are surely going to sell their weapons to the terrorists or surrender to them sooner or later."
Some of these group leaders have distanced themselves from the new militias. Sheik Hamid Muhanna, chief of the large tribe al-Bu Alwan, appeared on al-Jazeera denying the creation of such militia. He said he and the other sheiks are in control of their tribes, and those who met Maliki speak for themselves only.
The main Sunni religious group, the Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), remains staunchly opposed to any continuation of the occupation.
"It is all in the hands of the Americans; we are trying to cover the sun with a piece of glass," Sheik Ahmed from AMS told IPS in Baghdad. "The occupation power is too strong for any player to make a major change, and so we should believe in our own capabilities without dreaming of useful solutions from our enemy."
The association has consistently refused to take part in Iraqi politics under U.S. occupation.
The new militias are riding the back of what is controversially referred to as federalism, under which each group appears headed its own way.
Thafir al-Ani, official spokesman for al-Tawafuq, a major Sunni parliamentary group, resigned as chairman of a constitution committee last week. "I would have had to take part in dividing Iraq under the flag of federalism, which would have put a mark in my history as one of those who established the dividing of my country," he said.
The solutions being put forth are all driven by personal and sectarian interests, and fail to consider what is best for the country, Maki al-Nazzal, a political analyst from Fallujah, told IPS.
"The change that could take place is an Iraqi people's 'Orange Revolution,' which could occur with all Iraqis, regardless of their ID information, " al-Nazzal said. "But that would be very dangerous without international protection to the people who would do it because Iraqi rulers today, together with the U.S. Army, could massacre demonstrators. "
The "Orange Revolution" was the name given to public protests across Ukraine in November 2004 against a government and an election seen as illegitimate. The revolution was widely believed to have had U.S. support.
A member of an Iraqi Human Rights non-governmental organization who asked to be identified as Ibrahim said the United Nations must take a stronger stand in Iraq.
"The international community must take its real role in the country," he told IPS. "UNAMI's [UN Assistance Mission for Iraq] hands are tied, and they are only monitoring the disastrous situation without doing anything to help stop the bleeding of Iraq."
(Inter Press Service)
 
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