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To: Elroy who wrote (279218)3/9/2006 7:38:08 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1571707
 
Sectarian strife drives Iraqi families from homes By Mussab Al-Khairalla
Wed Mar 8, 11:54 AM ET


When Abu Kathim found a note outside his front door next to a large jar of blood, he knew it was the last day he would spend in his home.

"The note said the blood in the jar belonged to the last Shi'ite they had killed and my blood would replace it if I stayed in Taji," said the distressed 37-year-old, referring to a stronghold of Sunni insurgents north of Baghdad.

A member of Iraq's majority Shi'ite community, Abu Kathim had lived in Taji for 25 years.

Tensions between the Shi'ites and minority Sunnis have been running at fever pitch since the February 22 bombing of a Shi'ite shrine in Samarra, north of Taji. The attack pushed Iraq the closest to civil war that it has come since the U.S. invasion.

Fearful of sectarian reprisals that have killed hundreds, Shi'ite and Sunni families have been driven from mixed neighborhoods or towns across the country, resettling in areas where their sect is the dominant one.

Though the sectarian migration is relatively low-scale so far, the process recalls ethnic cleansing in the former Yugoslavia during the Balkan wars.

"This migration is a serious problem and we are increasing our efforts to deal with it, " said Ali al-Adeeb, a senior member of the ruling Shi'ite Alliance. "It is a plan by the terrorists to separate Iraqis and we must make it fail."

In the western Baghdad district of Yarmouk, several displaced Sunnis gathered recently at a mosque to request help from an official in Iraq's largest Sunni party.

Mustafa Abdul-Haq, a Sunni, said Shi'ites in his mixed Baghdad neighborhood of Hurriya had branded his family "terrorists" because his father had grown a long beard reminiscent of those worn by some Sunni militants.

"We left our house on the same day as the Samarra incident when we found out other Sunnis were attacked in the area," Abdul-Haq said. "Our neighbors told us militants fired a rocket-propelled-grenade at the house minutes after we left.."

DRIVEN OUT

Some people have left the capital Baghdadl, a religiously-mixed city of around seven million, and have moved back to their home provinces where their sect is dominant.

But others find nowhere to turn.

In the past week, some homeless families have streamed to the offices of radical Shi'ite cleric and militia leader Moqtada al-Sadr, and to the Sunni Iraqi Islamic Party, where they can find basic accommodation and food.

Records at Sadr's office in the Shi'ite Shula district of Baghdad document the cases of more than 500 displaced Shi'ite families, mostly from areas near Abu Ghraib, a violent town just west of Baghdad that has been a hotbed of Sunni-led insurgency.

"What we have is only the tip of the iceberg. We take their fingerprints and copies of their documents to take a background check to verify their status," said an official at Sadr's office, who refused to give his name because he said he has received death threats.

At the headquarters of the Iraqi Islamic party, at least 43 Sunni families have registered for help after being displaced.

BASIC SUPPORT

Omar al-Jubouri, head of the party's human rights section, said families who arrive receive blankets, food and $35 as temporary support.

"We must not allow outside powers to break up this country," he said. "I call on tribal and religious leaders from Sunni and Shi'ite areas to protect the minorities in their areas."

Some families' desperation to find residence in safer neighborhoods has driven property prices higher, as real-estate agents take advantage of the crisis.

Estate agent Abu Ihsan said demand for homes in the relatively safe district of Mansour in western Baghdad had pushed prices 50 percent higher over the past year.

"Most of the families come from Amriya and Doura, areas that witness security problems," he said in reference to Baghdad neighborhoods with heavy insurgent activity.

A 35-year-old Sunni who gave his name only as Mashadani said he fled the Shi'ite town of Husseiniya, just north of Baghdad, a day after his brother was killed while leaving a Sunni mosque.

"We can never go back to that area because I'm afraid," he said.

Such sectarian distrust is anathema to most Iraqis. While Shi'ites are a majority, there has traditionally been a high level of inter-marriage and many cities, particularly Baghdad, have mixed neighborhoods. That is now changing, dramatically.

"I'm married to a Shi'ite woman and I believe in Muslim unity," said Mashadani. "But my wife now understands that we have to live in Sunni areas from now on."

(Additional reporting by Aseel Kami and Omar al-Ibadi in Baghdad)



To: Elroy who wrote (279218)3/9/2006 7:40:03 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1571707
 
Ordinary Iraqis being targeted by extremists
In past 2 weeks, mechanics, bakers and blacksmiths among those killed
By PAUL GARWOOD
Associated Press

BAGHDAD, IRAQ - Marwan Rassam's Baghdad restaurant is famous for its pizzas and grilled meat sandwiches wrapped in flat saj bread.

Ordinary as that may seem, Rassam's diner has been bombed twice by extremists who have broadened their targets beyond Americans, Iraqi police and troops to include bakers, cigarette vendors and even employees of a perfume boutique.

"I'm like any other Iraqi nowadays, feeling that I am vulnerable and can die at any moment," Rassam, a Christian, said Friday.

In the past two weeks, mechanics, blacksmiths, bakers and liquor dealers have been killed in drive-by shootings or roadside bombings.

Two brothers working in an exclusive cologne and perfume shop in south Baghdad's Maalif district were gunned down Friday inside the store. The killers left without taking anything, police said.

About an hour later, armed men attacked a nearby watch store. This time the staff was ready, grabbing guns from below the counter and chasing the assailants into the street.

They shot one dead, and U.S. soldiers sent in a robot to remove a grenade from the corpse.

Just why Iraqis with no clear ties to the U.S. military or Iraqi police are being killed or kidnapped in increasing numbers has become one of the most disturbing questions of the post-Saddam Hussein era.

In Rassam's case, perhaps the young couples sitting at outside tables enraged Islamic extremists. Or the diner could have been targeted by militants wanting to kill policemen who regularly eat there.

The first attack, in 2004, wounded several of Rassam's patrons but caused no deaths. A year later, someone planted a bomb at the front door when the restaurant was closed, causing damage but no injuries.

Many blame the government for not securing the country. Others blame the Americans for failing to ensure law and order after overthrowing Saddam's authoritarian regime in 2003.

Iraqi political analyst Mustafa al-Ani predicted the violence will continue until Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari's government takes control of the streets. So much attention is directed at the war against the insurgents that police have little time to fight crime, he said.



To: Elroy who wrote (279218)3/9/2006 7:47:42 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571707
 
I know you don't like to read bad stuff Mr. Sunshine, and denial is always your first option, but if we could have a moment of your precious time....

Tens of thousands of Iraqis dead but exact figure elusive
By JIM KRANE
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, Mar. 8, 2006

BAGHDAD, Iraq – Three years into the war, one grim measure of its impact on Iraqis can be seen at Baghdad's morgue: There, the staff has photographed and catalogued more than 24,000 bodies from the Baghdad area alone since 2003, almost all killed in violence.

Despite such snapshots, the overall number of Iraqi civilians and soldiers killed since the U.S.-led invasion in spring 2003 remains murky. Bloodshed has worsened each year, pushing the Iraqi death toll into the tens of thousands. But no one knows the exact toll.

President Bush has said he thinks violence claimed at least 30,000 Iraqi dead as of December, while some researchers have cited numbers of 50,000, 75,000 or beyond.

The Pentagon has carefully counted the number of American military dead - now more than 2,300 - but declines to release its tally of Iraqi civilian or insurgent deaths.

The health ministry estimates 1,093 civilians died in the first two months of this year, nearly a quarter of the deaths government ministries reported in all of 2005.

The Iraqi government, however, has swung wildly in its casualty estimates, leading many to view its figures with skepticism.

At the Baghdad morgue, more than 10,000 corpses were delivered in 2005, up from more than 8,000 in 2004 and about 6,000 in 2003, said the morgue's director Dr. Faik Baker. All were corpses from either suspicious deaths or violent or war-related deaths - things like car bombs and gunshot wounds, tribal reprisals or crime - and not from natural causes.

By contrast, the morgue recorded under 3,000 violent or suspicious deaths in 2002, before the war, Baker said. The tally at the Baghdad morgue alone - one of several mortuaries in Iraq - thus exceeds figures from Iraqi government ministries that say 7,429 Iraqis were killed across all of Iraq in 2005.

"The violence keeps getting worse," the morgue director said Feb. 28 by phone from Jordan, where he said he had fled recently for his own safety after he said he was under pressure to not report deaths. Freezers built to hold six bodies are sometimes crammed with 20 unclaimed corpses. "You can imagine what a mess it is," he said.

Baghdad, which has a fifth of Iraq's 25 million inhabitants, has been a main center of the violence, with insurgent attacks and sectarian tensions both high here.

Many of the Baghdad morgue's bodies arrive from the emergency room at Yarmouk Hospital, where Dr. Osama Abdul Wahab said his staff occasionally had to deal with groups of two or three trauma patients before the invasion. Now they must cope with dozens of casualties at a time, he said.

"All of a sudden the doors of hell open and 40 injured patients arrive and you are alone," said Abdul Wahab, a 31-year-old neurologist.

Regardless of the lack of a precise figure on deaths, virtually all studies agree that among Iraqi government security forces, the police are at greater risk than the army. But it is Iraqi civilians who bear the brunt of the deaths.

According to the government's own count, twice as many Iraqi civilians - 4,024 - died last year in insurgency-related violence than police and soldiers.

Part of the reason for the high civilian death toll is that insurgents prefer to strike in the cities, especially Baghdad.

There is no way to verify the Iraqi government death figures independently, as is the case with most statistics in Iraq.

In a dangerous country as large as California, journalists and academics rely on figures provided by police, hospitals, the U.S. military and the Interior Ministry. But reports on casualties from major attacks often vary widely.

Further muddling the issue, some outside estimates of the dead include Iraqi insurgents, while others do not.

Michael O'Hanlon, a military analyst at the Brookings Institution who has closely followed the war's casualties, estimates 45,000 to 75,000 Iraqis have been killed, including insurgents and Iraqi soldiers.

O'Hanlon, who teaches a Columbia University course on estimating war casualties, called Bush's figure of 30,000 "on the lower end of the plausible range."

Iraq Body Count, a British anti-war group, put its tally of war dead at between 28,864 and 32,506 as of Feb. 26, but that doesn't include Iraqi soldiers or insurgents. It compiles its estimate of civilian deaths from news stories, corroborating each death through at least two reports.

But if Iraqi officials standardize tallies days later, news organizations have moved on to reporting other violence and may be unaware that early figures have been adjusted.

A United Nations survey conducted almost two years ago - before the deadliest guerrilla warfare began - said 24,000 Iraqi civilians and troops had been killed from the war's beginning in March 2003 through May 2004.

In late 2004, a study published in the Lancet medical journal estimated the war had caused some 98,000 civilian deaths. But the British government and others were skeptical of that finding, which was based on extrapolations from a small sample.

The question of who is to blame for the Iraqi deaths has long been controversial. Some critics argue that with the United States and its allies unable to maintain order, Iraq has become a deadlier place for ordinary civilians than it was under Saddam Hussein.

Johnson, the military spokesman, acknowledged that possibility, but said future generations would enjoy better lives because of Iraq's current hardships.

Rand Corp. military analyst James Dobbins, a former Bush administration envoy to Afghanistan, is among those who believe the United States bears some responsibility for the Iraqi dead, even if insurgents actually cause most of the deaths.

"The U.S. has never been able to protect the population, and has thus never won its confidence and secured its support," Dobbins said.

The Middle East Institute's Wayne White, who headed the State Department's Iraq intelligence team until last year, adds that regardless of whether Americans believe they should be blamed for these casualties, "many, many Iraqis hold the U.S. responsible for all of them."

Sarmad Ahmad al-Azami, a 35-year-old engineer, is an example.

His father died of a heart attack suffered during the U.S. bombing of a government palace next to his home in Baghdad's Azamiyah section. A year later, al-Azami's mother, 59, was killed in a car bombing.

"Our family has been devastated," al-Azami said. "Iraqis were living hard lives before this, but now things are much worse."

___

Associated Press writers Omar Sinan in Cairo, Egypt, and Jalal Mudhar in Baghdad contributed to this report.