Independent
Iraq's top Shia cleric warns of 'genocidal war'
By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad
Published: 19 July 2005

The slaughter of hundreds of civilians by suicide bombers shows that a
"genocidal war" is threatening Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the
country's most influential Shia cleric, warned yesterday.

So far he has persuaded most of his followers not to respond in kind against
the Sunni, from whom the bombers are drawn, despite repeated massacres of
Shia. But sectarian divisions between Shia and Sunni are deepening across
Iraq after the killing of 18 children in the district of New Baghdad last
week and the death of 98 people caught by the explosion of a gas tanker in
the market town of Musayyib. Many who died were visiting a Shia mosque.

There are also calls for the formation of militias to protect Baghdad
neighbourhoods. Khudayr al-Khuzai, a Shia member of parliament, said the
time had come to "bring back popular militias". He added: "The plans of the
interior and the defence ministries to impose security in Iraq have failed
to stop the terrorists."

Against the wishes of the Grand Ayatollah, who has counselled restraint,
some Shia have started retaliatory killings of members of the former regime,
most of whom but not all are Sunni. Some carrying out the attacks appear to
belong to the 12,000-strong paramilitary police commandos. Mystery surrounds
many killings. A former general in Saddam Hussein's army called Akram Ahmed
Rasul al-Bayati and his two sons, Ali, a policeman, and Omar were arrested
by police commandos 10 days ago. Omar was released and one of his uncles
paid $7,000 for the release of the other two. But when he went to get them
he saw them taken out of a car and shot dead.

Fear of Shia death squads, perhaps secretly controlled by the Badr Brigade,
the leading Shia militia, frightens the Sunni. The patience of the Shia is
wearing very thin. But their leaders want them to consolidate their strength
within the government after their election victory in January.

The radical Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr, whose Mehdi Army militia twice
fought US troops, has called for restraint. "The occupation itself is the
problem," he said. "Iraq not being independent is the problem. And the other
problems stem from that - from sectarianism to civil war. The entire
American presence causes this."

The suicide bombings show increasing sophistication. The casualty figures
from Musayyib were so horrific because the bomber blew himself up beside a
fuel tanker which had been stolen two days earlier and pre-positioned in the
centre of the town.

The slaughter of hundreds of civilians by suicide bombers shows that a
"genocidal war" is threatening Iraq, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the
country's most influential Shia cleric, warned yesterday.

So far he has persuaded most of his followers not to respond in kind against
the Sunni, from whom the bombers are drawn, despite repeated massacres of
Shia. But sectarian divisions between Shia and Sunni are deepening across
Iraq after the killing of 18 children in the district of New Baghdad last
week and the death of 98 people caught by the explosion of a gas tanker in
the market town of Musayyib. Many who died were visiting a Shia mosque.

There are also calls for the formation of militias to protect Baghdad
neighbourhoods. Khudayr al-Khuzai, a Shia member of parliament, said the
time had come to "bring back popular militias". He added: "The plans of the
interior and the defence ministries to impose security in Iraq have failed
to stop the terrorists."

Against the wishes of the Grand Ayatollah, who has counselled restraint,
some Shia have started retaliatory killings of members of the former regime,
most of whom but not all are Sunni. Some carrying out the attacks appear to
belong to the 12,000-strong paramilitary police commandos. Mystery surrounds
many killings. A former general in Saddam Hussein's army called Akram Ahmed
Rasul al-Bayati and his two sons, Ali, a policeman, and Omar were arrested
by police commandos 10 days ago. Omar was released and one of his uncles
paid $7,000 for the release of the other two. But when he went to get them
he saw them taken out of a car and shot dead.

Fear of Shia death squads, perhaps secretly controlled by the Badr Brigade,
the leading Shia militia, frightens the Sunni. The patience of the Shia is
wearing very thin. But their leaders want them to consolidate their strength
within the government after their election victory in January.

The radical Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr, whose Mehdi Army militia twice
fought US troops, has called for restraint. "The occupation itself is the
problem," he said. "Iraq not being independent is the problem. And the other
problems stem from that - from sectarianism to civil war. The entire
American presence causes this."

The suicide bombings show increasing sophistication. The casualty figures
from Musayyib were so horrific because the bomber blew himself up beside a
fuel tanker which had been stolen two days earlier and pre-positioned in the
centre of the town.


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