Scores die amid Iraqi shrine fury; civil war inevitable

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May 13, 2002
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Seattle
www.socialistworld.net
#1
Chaos.

More than 100 people have been killed in Iraq in apparent revenge attacks after the bombing of a key Shia shrine.



Scores of bullet-riddled bodies have been found in Baghdad, while in the bloodiest attack 47 factory workers were killed near the capital.

President Jalal Talabani called an emergency summit of Iraq's political leaders to discuss the violence.

Sunni Arab politicians boycotted the meeting and pulled out of coalition talks in protest at reprisal attacks.

"We are suspending our participation in negotiations on the government with the Shia Alliance," said Tareq al-Hashimi, a top official from the Iraqi Accord Front, Iraq's main Sunni Arab alliance.

The Iraqi government has announced a daytime curfew in Baghdad and the surrounding provinces for most of Friday - in a bid to help maintain order around the period of prayers.

Dozens of Sunni mosques have been targeted and several burnt to the ground since bombers blew up the golden dome of the revered al-Askari shrine in Samarra on Wednesday morning, reports say.

In a rare public rebuke, the main Sunni religious authority - the Association of Muslim Scholars - accused Iraq's top Shia cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, of fomenting the violence.

Ayatollah Sistani has urged Shias not to attack Sunni mosques, but a spokesman for the cleric said anger might be hard to contain.

"You wouldn't expect an abrupt or sudden calm, because there are some people whose reaction you can't control," London-based Fadel Bahar al-Eloum told the BBC.

In other developments:
  • US President George W Bush calls the bombing of the shrine an "evil act" and appeals for an end to reprisal attacks
  • Tens of thousands of Lebanese Shia Muslims rally in Beirut in protest at the shrine attack
  • An angry crowd prevents Iraqi Housing Minister Jassem Mohammed's convoy from reaching the bombed shrine in Samarra
  • The Iraqi government cancels all police and army leave and extends the curfew in Baghdad.
    'No-one safe'

As violence showed no sign of abating, Iraq's leaders have increasingly warned of the dangers of a civil war.

After meeting Shias, Kurds and leaders of a smaller Sunni group, President Talabani said in a televised broadcast if all-out war came "no-one would be safe", Reuters news agency reported.

The attack on the al-Askari shrine - which will be seen as a direct assault on the identity and rights of an entire community - takes the danger of a civil conflict to a new level, the BBC's Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen says.
A civil war would destroy the chances of the elected Shia-led government which is still being formed following December's election, and could lead to the break-up of the country, he says.

Mounting toll

In the heaviest single loss of life, the 47 factory workers were killed after being dragged out of their vehicles in Nahrawan, on the outskirts of Baghdad.
The victims, aged between 20 and 50, had been travelling home from work in a convoy of buses when they were ambushed and shot dead.

It is not clear whether the murders are linked to the attack on the shrine or whether they are part of the general insurgency.

Elsewhere, the bodies of a prominent al-Arabiya TV reporter and two of her crew, who had gone to cover the attack on the shrine, were discovered on Thursday morning.



Correspondent Atwar Bahjat's body was among the three found about 15km (10 miles) north of Samarra.

At least 12 people died in a bomb attack on an Iraqi army patrol in the town of Baquba, while one person died in a gun attack on a Sunni mosque in the city.

In other attacks, four US soldiers were killed near Hawijah, while three died near Balad, when their vehicles were hit by roadside bombs, the US army said on Thursday.
 

Hemp

Sicc OG
Sep 5, 2005
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#3
u see this tho
if muslims are gonna go blow up each others mosques then none of you should be surprised at them protesting and burning down buildings because of cartoons that are made by their worst enemies, the non-believers

i mean they dont give a fuck about morals or the law
religion = #1 and always #1 which is understood if your a fundamentalist

its funny because i knew we would reach this state but i couldnt see the obvious that the conflicts will be started with muslims , even tho it was right there in front of my face

and do i think there will be a civil war in iraq? probably but not yet
this is just gonna add on to the big tension that has been building up
then thats when there will be civil war

livin in dearborn michigan with the majority of the ppl being arabs, sunnis n shiites, and so far they have been cool about the whole thing
but im pretty sure there will be some rioting n shit in the future
we will see what happens
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#9
HERESY said:
americas plan is working.
Fuck yeah it is, especially when most of the people don't know shit about what the plan is...And don't speak English or have TV...
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
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#13
I noticed a difference in where the bodies were found. One says "Residents told police that the bullet-riddled bodies were found around midday behind a brick factory, the Interior Ministry said." And the other says they were found in a ditch, but maybe this ditch was behind the building? I dunno if that's what you were talking about...I'm not done comparing though..

And I think it was the 2nd link...Pretty sure it was....They listed way more deaths and shit that's going on around Iraq as a whole, not just the issue at hand regarding the 47 people...Neither of the articles are written all that well, imo.
 

HERESY

THE HIDDEN HAND...
Apr 25, 2002
18,326
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www.godscalamity.com
www.godscalamity.com
#14
first one:

The victims were traveling in three buses when they were stopped at a checkpoint in the Nahrawan area, about 12 miles south of Baqouba, said Dhari Thuban, a member of the Diyala Provincial Council. The buses were burned and their passengers killed, he said.

Who patrolled the checkpoints? Iraqi or american troops?


From the second one:

Gunmen shot dead 47 civilians and left their bodies in a ditch near Baghdad

and

At least 47 other bodies were found scattered across Iraq, many of them shot execution-style and dumped in Shiite-dominated parts of Baghdad.
 

I AM

Some Random Asshole
Apr 25, 2002
21,001
86
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#15
Gotta love the media! Either they're bias pieces of shit or they dont' know how to actually report.

I'm disappointed in myself for not catching what you were talking about though.
 

Hemp

Sicc OG
Sep 5, 2005
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#16
o yeah also about the main topic,
the real "civil" war in islam is between shiites and wahabies and sunnis and wahabies.

i know sunnis wouldnt go blow up a shiite mosque because sunnis know that there are some muslim shiites and others with beliefs that contradict islam therefor making them non-muslims

so who are those arab men dressed as police that came in and tied the shiites up while setting up the explosives?
wahabies, my friends

the same mother fuckers runnin the alqaeda, and one wahabie everybody knows is osama bin laden.

sounds like a perfect plan for them to attack both of their enemies, the sunnis and shiites without even attacking them, just by letting them attack themselves.

so was the explosion set up by the CIA?
well since cia started and funded alqaeda, and funded bin laden n had him working for them, i wouldnt be surprised if this is all part of their plan to make muslims force weak, AND enriching the hate towards muslims among the rest of the world.


too bad the muslims are too caught up in what the book says, and quick to act to show how serious they are, that they just "miss" the bigger picture and cause a self destruction among themselves and their religion.


also i wouldnt be surprised if the USA gets hit by some nuclear bomb and blame the muslims countries, when the nuke really came from israel (middle east)

the picture is all startin to add up as to why israel has remained in the middle east surrounded by muslim countries and the US funding the FUCK out of israel
 
May 1, 2003
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#17
Civil war is going on NOW! Iran has a lot to do with it too. When the U.S. finally leaves Iraq(this is what Iran is waitng for) Iraq will become part of Iran.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#18
Vehicles banned in Baghdad after night of violence

Staff and agencies
Friday March 3, 2006



Iraqi police and soldiers took to the streets of Baghdad today to enforce a vehicle ban in the city after a night of violence which saw at least 19 people killed in the capital's suburbs.
Suspected Sunni insurgents stormed an electricity substation and killed Shia factory workers in two separate attacks, which police believe may have been carried out by the same group.

Police Lt Bilal Ali Majed said the attacks began at dusk yesterday when a string of mortar shells struck an electricity power plant in the small town of Nahrawan, near Baghdad.

Half an hour later, dozens of gunmen arrived in pickup trucks and set fire to the building, he said.
Police Lt Mohammed Kheyoun said at least nine people were killed and three injured in the ensuing gun battle, as security guards returned fire, and Iraqi police and army sent in reinforcements.

He identified the victims as guards and technicians employed by the facility. He said he did not know whether any of the attackers had been killed or injured.

In the next-door suburb of Maamil, gunmen shot dead 10 migrant Shia workers employed at a brick factory as they slept in their shacks, according to an interior ministry official.

One local politician said at least 25 people had died, among them three children.

The interior ministry said it could not confirm a total death toll but said nine guards at the power station were killed along with "many" factory workers.

Iraqi authorities imposed a ban on private vehicles in the capital and the surrounding area in an attempt to prevent attacks during midday prayers on Friday, the most important service of the week.

Prime minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari warned preachers not to incite hatred or violence in their sermons, threatening them with "severe measures" if they did.

"Our hope is that Friday sermons be sermons of unity," he said. "The street is angry and they should know how to calm the people and reassure them that the government will do all it can to pass through this period."

Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr told followers to pray with Sunnis.

The vehicle ban began as the overnight curfew ended at 6am and was due to last until 4pm. Security forces sealed off the city, preventing most vehicles from entering or leaving.

Some residents expressed frustration that they were only told about the ban late on Thursday, which left them little time to stock up on food and other provisions.

But most accepted the move as necessary after hundreds of sectarian killings following the bombing of the Shia shrine in Samarra on February 22.

Saad Juwad Kadim, a taxi driver forced to take the day off, said: "A curfew is normal in such situations. It's a way to stop terrorists from carrying out their operations."