http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1495800,00.html

Basra out of control, says chief of police

The chief of police in Basra admitted yesterday that he had effectively
lost control of three-quarters of his officers and that sectarian
militias had infiltrated the force and were using their posts to
assassinate opponents. 

Speaking to the Guardian, General Hassan al-Sade said half of his
13,750-strong force was secretly working for political parties in Iraq's
second city and that some officers were involved in ambushes. 

Other officers were politically neutral but had no interest in policing
and did not follow his orders, he told the Guardian. 

"I trust 25% of my force, no more." 

The claim jarred with Basra's reputation as an oasis of stability and
security and underlined the burgeoning influence of Shia militias in
southern Iraq. 

"The militias are the real power in Basra and they are made up of
criminals and bad people," said the general. 

"To defeat them I would need to use 75% of my force, but I can rely on
only a quarter." 

In fact the port city, part of the British zone, is remarkably peaceful.
It is largely untouched by the insurgency and crimes such as kidnapping
and theft have ebbed since the chaotic months after the March 2003
invasion. 

In marked contrast to Baghdad, razor wire and blast walls are uncommon
in Basra and instead of cowering indoors after dark families take
strolls along the corniche. 

But Gen Sade said the tranquillity had been bought by ceding authority
to conservative Islamic parties and turning a blind eye to their
militias' corruption scams and hit squads. 

A former officer in Saddam Hussein's marine special forces, he was
chosen to lead Basra's police force by the previous government headed by
Ayad Allawi and he started the job five months ago. 

He praised the establishment of a competent 530-strong tactical support
unit and claimed that 90% of ordinary crime was detected. 

But he was frustrated that a weak, fledgling state left him powerless to
purge his force of members of Iraq's two main rival Shia militias:
Moqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi army and the Badr Brigade of the Supreme Council
for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri). 

Sciri is one of the dominant parties in the Shia-led government in
Baghdad and Mr Sadr, a radical cleric, has become a mainstream political
player since leading two uprisings against occupation forces last year. 

Both groups have been implicated in targeting officials from Saddam's
ousted regime. Since such people tend to be Sunni Arabs, the score
settling is often perceived as sectarian. 

"Some of the police are involved in assassinations," said Gen Sade. "I
am trying to sort this out, for example by putting numbers on police
cars so they can be identified." 

In March, police watched impassively as their friends in the Mahdi army
members beat up scores of university students at a picnic deemed immoral
because music was played and couples mingled. Gen Sade identified the
officers, but did not punish them for fear of provoking the militia. 

If there is trouble at Basra, university staff still phone the police,
said Professor Saleh Najim, dean of the engineering college. "But you
can't be sure they will do their duty." 

The police chief felt cut off from his superiors at the interior
ministry in Baghdad and lamented that a government commission was
forcing some of his best officers to resign over alleged links with the
ousted regime. He did not know how long he would keep his job. 

Colin Smith, a deputy chief constable and Britain's senior police
adviser in Iraq, said the Basra force's ability to patrol and
investigate crimes was an "exponential development" from two years ago
and he expected improvements to accelerate. 

"I'm optimistic. It's a five to 10 year project, it won't be overnight,"
he said. 

He criticised previous British and American trainers for setting the bar
too high for a force being built from scratch. "Too often we have given
the Iraqis plans that don't work. We still don't have an Iraq police
strategy." 

For example police stations were given expensive cameras to photograph
suspects without heed to the Iraqis' difficulty in replacing the
batteries, said Mr Smith. 

"A lot of the time we're not moving forward but rectifying the mistakes
made in the past two years." 

--
How can we lose when we're so sincere?! -- Charlie Brown


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