Ini akan menyebabkan banyak jumlah korban tewas di pihak Irak.

   Seharusnya kita semua secepatnya menghentikan pertumpahdarahan di 
Irak, kondisi di Najaf sangat tidak memungkinkan utk keselamatan 
masyarakat dan pengepungan asing. Masih belum ada tindakan utk 
penghentian peperangan. Mereka maupun US adalah sama sama umat tetapi 
memerlukan kesempatan utk berdialog dan penyelesaian. Saling membantu 
mencegah pertumpahdarahan adalah tugas kita semua sebagai saudara. 

  Kalau bangsa dunia membantu masyarakat Indonesia utk mencegah 
berperang, itu adalah usaha bersama dan penolongan. Ini akan mendapat 
pahala besar maupun pujianNya berkat mencegah pertumpahdarahan dan 
membangun solusi.

  Apakah hanya terbaik utk penghentian perang adalah dukungan anti 
kekerasan oleh bangsa dunia pada para pejuang Irak dan US? Perlu ada 
protes atas kekerasan dilakukan US dan para pejuang Irak. Dengan 
gencatan senjata, reformasi dan penarikan pasukan US merupakan 
langkah terbaik bagi pencegahan konflik. 

  Sungguh berbahaya bila pasukan Irak ditumpas, apakah akan ada 
kemungkinan pembalasdendaman terhadap negara US? ini dapat terjadi 
dan perlu dicegah karena banyak orang yg dapat simpati pada para 
pejuang Irak. Tidak mungkin bila para pejuang Irak Mahdi disalahkan 
tetapi bagaimana Al qoeda? Mengapa tdk menggunakan dialog dan kerja 
sama? 

  Sebenarnya ini peringatan adanya resiko dapat masuk ke neraka 
adalah US, pemerintahan Irak dan para pejuang Irak telah menghalalkan 
pembunuhan, kedendaman dan kekeraskepalaan tanpa memperdulikan 
dialog, solusi dan kerja sama karena menyangkut keselamatan umat umat 
dan sangat tidak perikemanusiaan.

Semoga Allah dapat melihat apa terjadi di sekitarnya dan mengharapkan 
adanya uluran tangan kita sebagai umat umat utk membantu penghentian 
konflik secara perikemanusiaan dan keadilan.

Wassalam,

--------------------------------------
Iraq Cleric Vows Fight to Death Vs. U.S. 

NAJAF, Iraq - A radical Shiite cleric vowed to fight to the death as 
his loyalists battled U.S. troops for a fifth straight day Monday, 
and bombings in Sunni regions outside Baghdad � including a failed 
attempt to assassinate a deputy governor � killed at least 10 Iraqis. 

The fighting with Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia began to have 
economic fallout. Iraq (news - web sites)'s southern oil company 
stopped pumping oil to the southern city of Basra � where militiamen 
were controlling main streets � because of threats to infrastructure, 
an official with the company said. 

About 1.8 million barrels per day, or 90 percent of Iraq's exports, 
move through Basra, and any shutdown in the flow of Iraq's main money 
earner would badly hamper reconstruction efforts. 

Explosions and gunfire were heard throughout the holy Shiite city of 
Najaf, south of the capital, the main scene of fighting between U.S. 
troops and the militiamen. As U.S. helicopters hovered overhead, 
troops tried to drive militiamen from a vast cemetery they have used 
as a base, and a U.S. tank rolled within 400 yards of Najaf's holiest 
site. 

Seven militants were killed since Sunday evening in Najaf, an al-Sadr 
official said. 

A senior U.S. military official in Baghdad estimated Monday that 360 
insurgents died in Najaf in the first four days of the battle, 
although al-Sadr's militia insists the toll has been far lower. 

Five U.S. troops have been killed in Najaf, according to the 
military, and the U.S. official said 19 had been wounded. Najaf 
police chief Brig. Ghalib al-Jazaari said about 20 police have been 
killed in the violence since Thursday. 

U.S. and Iraqi forces have been trying to rein in al-Sadr to prevent 
the current violence from expanding on the scale of a widespread 
revolt his militia launched in April, fighting for two months until a 
series of truces brought a relative calm. 

Al-Sadr on Monday vowed to keep up the battle, rejecting calls a day 
earlier from interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi for the militiamen to 
stop fighting. 

"I will continue fighting," al-Sadr told reporters. "I will remain in 
Najaf city until the last drop of my blood has been spilled." 

"Resistance will continue and increase day by day," he said. "Our 
demand is for the American occupation to get out of Iraq. We want an 
independent, democratic, free country." 

At the same time, violence in the insurgency-plagued Sunni regions of 
Iraq continued. A suicide attacker detonated a station wagon packed 
with explosives Monday outside the home of Diyala province's deputy 
governor, Aqil Hamid al-Adili, killing six policemen guarding his 
home. 

Al-Adili was wounded and taken to a military medical facility after 
the blast in Balad Ruz, 40 miles northeast of Baghdad. The explosion 
shattered windows and blew doors off their hinges on the house, 
wounding a total 17 people � including al-Adili's 9-year-old son, 
Police Brig. Daoud Mahmoud said. 

It was the latest in a campaign of insurgent attacks targeting 
officials in Iraq's new government � seen as cooperatine with 
Americans. 

Also Monday, a roadside bomb blew up next to a bus on a main street 
in the town of Khalidiyah, 70 miles west of Baghdad, killing four 
passengers and wounding four others, officials said. 

The military reported Monday that a U.S. Marine was killed in action 
Sunday in Anbar province, a center of Sunni insurgent violence. The 
death brought to at least 927 the number of American servicemembers 
who have died in Iraq. 

The Shiite violence began Thursday in Najaf after the truces reached 
in June collapsed. During the two-month uprising in April, U.S. 
commanders vowed to "capture or kill" al-Sadr, but later tacitly 
agreed to let Iraqi authorities deal with the cleric. 

Even amid the fighting, troops appeared to still be keeping a hands-
off policy with al-Sadr himself. The U.S. officer in Baghdad, 
speaking on condition of anonymity, said al-Sadr "is not an 
objective; we are not actively pursuing him." 

Much of the fighting has centered on the vast cemetery near the Imam 
Ali Shrine. U.S. forces using helicopter gunships launched a renewed 
offensive Sunday to drive militants out of the cemetery after 
claiming two days earlier to have secured the area in some of the 
fiercest fighting. 

On Monday, a U.S. tank approached within about 400 yards of the 
shrine compound, the closest the military has come to it in the 
fighting. 

Mahdi Army militiamen in Baghdad kidnapped a senior Iraqi policeman, 
Brig. Raed Mohammed Khudair, who is responsible for all police 
patrols in eastern Baghdad, said Col. Adnan Abdel Rahman, an Interior 
Ministry spokesman. 

In a video broadcast on Al-Jazeera television, militants demanded the 
government release all Mahdi Army prisoners in exchange for Khudair, 
whom they snatched Sunday. 

The Interior Ministry clamped a nighttime curfew Monday on Sadr City, 
a Shiite neighborhood in eastern Baghdad where U.S. troops and al-
Sadr militiamen have also been fighting. 

In Basra, masked al-Sadr followers patrolled some main streets Monday 
and set up checkpoints. No Iraqi police or British troops could be 
seen, witnesses said. 

The Mahdi Army threatened Monday to take over local government 
buildings in Basra if U.S. troops did not leave Najaf, and also said 
they would target oil pipelines and ports in southern Iraq. 

A senior official with Iraq's South Oil Company said said the 
southern oil fields stopped pumping oil Monday after the threats, 
though oil already in storage tanks at Basra's port was still being 
loaded onto tankers. 

Iraq's defense minister, Hazem Shaalan, accused neighboring Iran of 
helping arm the Shiite militiamen. 

"There are Iranian-made weapons that have been found in the hands of 
criminals in Najaf who received these weapons from across the Iranian 
border," Shaalan told the Arab-language television network al-
Arabiya. 

Iran has denied interfering in Iraq, though many believe it is 
funneling money to a range of Shiite groups to increase its 
influence. 

Iran confirmed Monday that Faridoun Jihani, the Iranian consul to the 
Iraqi city of Karbala, had been kidnapped and said it was trying to 
win his release. 

Jihani's kidnappers, in a video released Saturday, accused Iran of 
meddling in Iraq's affairs. Scores of other foreigners have been 
kidnapped as leverage to force foreign troops and businesses from the 
country. 

In an video posted on the Internet, militants beheaded a hostage 
identified only as a Bulgarian. Two Bulgarian truck drivers were 
kidnapped June 29, and the beheaded body of one of the drivers was 
found in mid July and a tape was released showing his death



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