<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/international/middleeast/10iraq.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

April 10, 2005

Demonstrators in Iraq Demand That U.S. Leave
 By DEXTER FILKINS


BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 9 - Tens of thousands of Iraqis marked the second
anniversary of the fall of Saddam Hussein by marching here in the capital
on Saturday to demand the withdrawal of American forces. Meanwhile, one of
the most lethal insurgent groups warned Iraqis against joining the army or
the police force.

Most protesters were followers of Moktada al-Sadr, the rebel Shiite cleric
who has led several armed uprisings against American forces but who has
recently begun to take part in democratic politics.

The demonstrators gathered at Firdos Square in central Baghdad, where
American troops and Iraqis pulled down a huge statue of Mr. Hussein on
April 9, 2003, in a moment captured on television cameras and seen around
the world. A year ago, the square was sealed off by American soldiers as
Mr. Sadr's guerrillas rose up across the country.

 Despite the symbolism of the day, the rest of Baghdad was mostly quiet.
The demonstration was peaceful, and far fewer people took part than the one
million Mr. Sadr's aides had predicted. Representatives of the Association
of Muslim Scholars, a leading group of Sunni clerics that has expressed
sympathy for the guerrilla insurgency, said its followers had taken part in
the march.

 The marchers echoed the demands by Mr. Sadr and the Sunni clerics: a
timetable for the withdrawal of American forces and the release of Iraqi
detainees from American-supervised prisons. Banners held aloft during the
march also called for a rapid trial for Mr. Hussein and the elevation of
Islam as the official religion of Iraq. One of the main chants of the
morning, echoed by thousands, was: "No America, no Saddam! Yes to Islam!"

Demonstrators held up large photographs of Mr. Hussein that were taken
after his capture, showing the former dictator looking shaggy and old. The
marchers also burned large photos of President Bush and Prime Minister Tony
Blair of Britain.

 "We are asking that the occupier leave our country," said Amer Shihab, a
university student who had come from Kut in southern Iraq. "Iraq now has
enough competent forces to maintain security by itself."

The demonstration illustrated the ability of Mr. Sadr to mobilize his
followers peacefully and capitalize on resentment here caused by the
presence of more than 150,000 foreign troops. Thousands of demonstrators
traveled by bus from southern cities and stayed overnight in the homes of
their allies in Sadr City, the impoverished district that is named for Mr.
Sadr's father, a revered Shiite cleric believed to have been killed on Mr.
Hussein's orders. The district forms the heart of the son's support.

 Last year, Mr. Sadr's armed followers, called the Mahdi Army, were routed
by American forces after they rose up in cities across the south. The
mauling of his army is believed to be one of the chief factors behind Mr.
Sadr's entry into the political mainstream. He now commands one of the
largest blocs in the Shiite alliance that makes up the government.

Still, the principal leaders in the Shiite alliance have publicly said that
they want American forces to stay. Mr. Sadr's demonstration on Saturday
seemed calculated to show others in the Shiite alliance, not the Americans,
how strong he was.

 Mr. Sadr, who is wanted in connection with the killing of a rival cleric
in 2003, was not seen at the rally. He has been in hiding since August,
when American forces entered Najaf to fight his militia after it had seized
control of the Imam Ali Shrine, one of holiest sites in Shiite Islam.

Other disaffected groups used the occasion on Saturday to denounce the
American military presence in Iraq. One was the Iraqi Islamic Party, a
predominantly Sunni Muslim party that decided to boycott the elections on
Jan. 30 after being threatened by the insurgents. Since then, the party has
flirted with taking part in the political process, but has not done so.

In a statement, the Islamic Party blamed the United States for the chaos
and destruction that followed the collapse of Mr. Hussein's rule. Since
then, the statement said, the presence of American forces has brought only
misery to the country. "The 9th of April is a day in which one tyrant fell
so that another occupying tyrant could take his place," it said.

Although Sunni Arabs make up only about 20 percent of Iraq's population,
they dominated the country for hundreds of years. When the Americans
toppled Mr. Hussein, many Sunnis saw themselves as losers, and on Jan. 30,
few went to the polls.

 Despite the harsh talk, several prominent Sunni groups have recently
indicated a willingness to consider taking part in the democratic process.
That, in turn, has created anxiety among hard-line groups that want to
continue fighting the Americans.

Last week, 64 Sunni clerics issued a fatwa, or holy writ, encouraging Iraqi
Sunnis to join the police and armed forces.

 The statement represented a significant break with the past; Iraqi police
officers and soldiers have been among the prime targets of the
Sunni-dominated insurgency.

On Saturday, insurgent sympathizers passed out leaflets at mosques in
Mosul, a Sunni-majority city, threatening Sunnis if they joined the police
and armed forces.

 The leaflets were labeled "Al Qaeda of Mesopotamia," the group led by Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian militant who has pledged support to Al
Qaeda and is believed responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Iraqi
civilians.

"Sunnis must ban their sons from collaborating with the infidel crusaders,"
the leaflet read. "Allowing Sunnis to join the tyrannical army would make
jihad lose its meaning."

In Baghdad, officials at Yarmouk Hospital reported that 40 bullet-riddled
bodies had been brought there from Yusufiya, a town south of Baghdad known
as a haven for insurgents.

Also in Baghdad, an aide to Mr. Sadr, Fadhel Abdul-Zahra al-Musawi, was
fatally shot Friday night while he drove a car in Dawra, a neighborhood in
southern Baghdad. In Mosul, a car bomb killed two Iraqi policemen and a
woman working for the agricultural department there.

 Khalid al-Ansary contributed reporting for this article.

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