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Boy is victim of Iraq sectarian strife
by 
Tuesday 23 May 2006 3:09 PM GMT 


Increased security has failed to prevent sectarian violence  


Baghdad's sectarian hit squads don't spare the young.



The family of 12-year-old Hani Saadoun has been traumatised by that
reality since his tortured body, mutilated by electric drills, was
found on Tuesday. They had been in a state of fear since he failed to
return home for lunch a day earlier.

Gunmen in three cars cornered him as he headed to work, helping out at
his father's parking lot, Interior Ministry sources and relatives
said.

The Shia family started panicking when he had not turned up by Monday
evening. By the time they learned of his fate on Tuesday, he was just
another statistic in Iraq's packed morgues.

The sense of loss mixed with shock as details of his brutal ordeal,
shared by many dozens every day, became clear.

Saadoun's body was found dumped in southern Baghdad's violent, mostly
Sunni Arab, district of Dora. It bore the hallmarks of sectarian
killings that have increased since the bombing of a Shia shrine in
February.

The youngster, with a bullet hole in his head and another through the
chest, was blindfold and his hands bound. He had been whipped with
cables, tormented by electric drills and his body dragged through the
streets behind a car.

Possible causes of death

There was no way of ruling out other possible reasons for his death.
He could have been the victim of one of Iraq's bloody tribal feuds or
criminal gangs. But one conclusion predominates in a country becoming
familiar with corpses dumped by the road.

"This was definitely a sectarian killing," said the boy's uncle, a
television cameraman well known among Baghdad journalists, who asked
to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals.

"Witnesses told us that gunmen in three Opel cars grabbed him at a
checkpoint. We know he was tortured and we know they dragged him
through the streets by a rope and dumped him."

At Saadoun's funeral, women in traditional black Shia shawls wailed as
his mother, Fatima Oraybi, stared up at his crude wooden coffin on the
roof of a car.

"Oh my son," she cried.

Shocked

Others could not understand why he was targeted. Drilling victims of
kidnappings and killings is not unusual in Iraq, but the torture of
such a young boy left his relatives shocked.

"What did he do? He was 12. He was not a general or a minister," said
his cousin Amir Mohammad.

Saadoun's uncle said police and troops refused to help recover the
body because Dora was too dangerous.

"His father had to round up relatives and people from the 
neighbourhood to get the body," he said. "He had nothing to do with
sectarianism or politics. He was just a boy."


Reuters
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/63E3EF5A-580F-4317-B3EC-
822837588530.htm 

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