الإثنين 08 صفر 
1433هـ - 02 يناير 2012م
Iraq war death toll at 162,000, mostly civilians: NGO
In all, the non-governmental organization said an estimated 162,000 people were 
killed in Iraq in the nearly nine years of conflict. (File photo)       

AFP, BAGHDAD

Around 162,000 people, almost 80 percent of them civilians, were killed in Iraq 
from the start of the 2003 U.S.-led invasion up to last year's withdrawal of 
American forces, a British NGO said on Monday. Iraq Body Count (IBC) warned 
that, contrary to apparent trends in figures released by the Iraqi government, 
the level of violence has changed little from mid-2009, though attacks are 
markedly down from when the country was in the throes of sectarian war in 2006 
and 2007. In all, the non-governmental organization said an estimated 162,000 
people were killed in Iraq in the nearly nine years of conflict. It said around 
79 percent of the fatalities were civilians, while the remainder included U.S. 
soldiers, Iraqi security forces, and insurgents.

"The violence peaked in late 2006 but was sustained at high levels until the 
second half of 2008 -- nearly 90 percent of the deaths occurred by 2009," IBC 
said in a statement.

But it warned that "there has now been no noticeable downward trend (in 
civilian deaths) since mid-2009."

"Recent trends indicate a persistent low-level conflict in Iraq that will 
continue to kill civilians at a similar rate for years to come. While these 
data indicate no improvement, time will tell whether the withdrawal of U.S. 
forces will have an effect on casualty levels."

U.S. troops, who at their peak numbered nearly 170,000 on as many as 505 bases 
in Iraq, completed their withdrawal from the country on Dec. 18 and Prime 
Minister Nuri al-Maliki dubbed Saturday to be "Iraq Day", marking when the 
bilateral pact allowing American forces to stay expired.

IBC said it had recorded more than 114,000 civilian deaths in Iraq since the 
invasion, and said the addition of figures from U.S. military logs published by 
whistleblower website WikiLeaks, as well as officially recorded U.S. and Iraqi 
security deaths and insurgent tolls, put the overall figure at 162,000.

The worst non-civilian group affected were the Iraqi police, with 9,019 
reported deaths, and Baghdad was the most dangerous city in the country, with 
half of the recorded deaths, equating to 2.5 times the national average.

A total of 4,474 U.S. soldiers died in Iraq, as well.

The NGO's overall toll differed markedly from that published by the Iraqi 
government, which said on Sunday that 2,645 people were killed in violence in 
2011, compared to IBC's toll of 4,059.

Iraqi government figures, unlike IBC data, indicate attacks decreased 
significantly last year from 2010, when 3,605 people were killed.

The government's monthly data, which does not go back to 2003, puts the death 
toll since the beginning of 2007 at 34,485.

The IBC release came a day after Maliki called for Iraq to kick-start the 
rebuilding of its violence-wracked economy and infrastructure, with the country 
mired in a political standoff between the Shiite-led government and a key 
Sunni-backed bloc that has raised sectarian tensions.

"The coming period is no less important or dangerous than the previous stage," 
Maliki said Sunday during a speech in Baghdad's al-Rasheed hotel, in the 
capital's heavily-fortified Green Zone. "Our work has just begun."

Maliki had declared last Saturday to be a national holiday dubbed "Iraq Day", 
and said the country's days of dictatorship and one-party rule were behind it, 
even as rival politicians have accused him of centralizing decision-making 
power.

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