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Regional News
Gunmen kill 5 guards in Iraq
Published Date: December 30, 2009 

BAGHDAD : Gunmen killed five Sunni security guards, including one by beheading, 
in a gruesome pre-dawn slaying yesterday at a village checkpoint in central 
Iraq, officials said. The five victims were members of the Sons of Iraq, or 
Awakening Councils, a Sunni-dominated security force now on the government 
payroll that has been targeted in revenge attacks after helping turn the tide 
against Al-Qaeda. Authorities were alerted to the checkpoint in the village of 
Tal Massoud shortly after the 2 a.m. shooting
, said one police official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was 
not authorized to discuss the attack with the media. The village is about 30 
miles (50 kilometers) north of Baghdad.

The police official described a scene of bullet-riddled bodies littered across 
the checkpoint. One of the bodies, he said, had been beheaded. The leader of 
the village Awakening Council, Awad Sami al-Halbosi, said he also inspected the 
bodies after the checkpoint shooting. "The families of the victims were called 
and asked to take their sons for burial, which was done," al-Halbosi told The 
Associated Press.

The victims were part of the Sunni tribe of Khazraj. They are the latest 
example of attacks on Sahwa, the Arabic word for Awakening. Some of the force 
fought American troops as insurgents, before tiring of the violence and turning 
on their former allies, the militant group Al-Qaeda in Iraq.

The councils have been widely credited with stabilizing Iraq after joining up 
with US and Iraqi forces in the anti-Al-Qaeda drive about three years ago. But 
they have been hit by a steady barrage of revenge attacks since then. Some also 
have complained of delayed or missed paychecks after the US military stopped 
bankrolling the Sahwa last year and turned over the accounts to Iraq's 
Shiite-led government. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has repeatedly said he 
would honor the pledge to continue paying them
.

The US is seeking to ease some of the group's concerns. The American military 
also has been monitoring attacks against Awakening leader, 212 of whom have 
been killed in the past two years. The US military, which tallied the deaths, 
blames Al-Qaeda for the attacks.

In another deadly shooting yesterday, an Iraqi army intelligence officer was 
killed in the eastern Baghdad neighborhood of al Baladiyat, Iraqi police 
officials said. Drive-by shooters targeted Iraqi Army 1st Lt. Wadi Direa Atiyah 
as he was driving his car, said the officials who spoke on condition of 
anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. Atiyah was 
wearing civilian clothing at the time.-AP

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