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Analysis : Middle
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Violence against occupation opponents continues in lead-up
to Iraq election
By James Cogan
26 November 2005
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In contrast to Washingtons propaganda that a stable democracy
is emerging in Iraq, a campaign of terror and intimidation is
continuing against opponents of the US occupation in the weeks
leading up to the December 15 election.
The November 13 exposure of a secret prison in Baghdad, where
American troops found interior ministry police commandos torturing
alleged members of the guerilla resistance, has been followed
this week by the blatant assassination of a Sunni Arab leader.
At 4 a.m. on November 23, dozens of men wearing Iraqi army
uniforms sealed off the streets and forced their way into the
Baghdad home of 70-year-old Sheik Kadhim Sarhid Hemaiyem, a leader
of one of the largest Sunni tribes, the Dulaimi. Many members
of the tribe reportedly support or participate in the armed resistance
to the US occupation. In a matter of minutes, the elderly sheik,
three of his sons and a son-in-law were gunned down.
Over recent weeks, the sheik had been giving political and
practical support to an election campaign by his brother. Whereas
the overwhelming majority of Sunni Arabs boycotted the elections
in January, millions may cast a ballot on December 15. This follows
calls by religious and tribal leaders such as Hemaiyem for opponents
of the occupation to vote. Sunni-based parties could win 15 to
20 percent of the seats in the next parliament.
A police spokesman claimed the killers were terrorists
seeking to intimidate Sunnis into not voting. However, the sheiks
brother, Abdel Moniem Sarhid Hemaiyem, rejected the allegation,
telling the Los Angeles Times: They attacked us at
4 a.m., during the curfew, so they had to be from the authorities.
I want to ask the ministers of defence and interior ... why are
they killing us?
A spokesman for the Association of Muslim Scholars (AMS), the
umbrella organisation for thousands of Sunni clerics, also blamed
the interior ministry, stating: We warn the government against
continuing this tyranny.
The major Shiite parties in the government are the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Daawa
organisation of the current prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari.
SCIRI leader Bayan Jabr is the interior minister. Many interior
ministry officials and police are allegedly members of SCIRIs
Badr Organisation militia, which was formed in Iran in the 1980s
to fight against the Iraqi military in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq
War.
Both Daawa and SCIRI backed the US invasion in 2003,
seeing it as the means of gaining power and privilege for the
Shiite religious elite, which had been sidelined by the previous
predominantly Sunni Baathist regime. In the elections in January
this year, the Sunni boycott and a large Shiite turnout enabled
the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance (UIA) to win close to 48 percent
of the vote and more than half the seats in the parliament.
After the Jaafari government was formed in April and SCIRI
took control of the interior ministry, reports of extra-judicial
killings steadily increased. The British Independents
Iraq correspondent Kim Sengupta commented on November 20: Behind
the daily reports of suicide bombings and attacks on coalition
forces is a far more shadowy struggle, one that involves tortured
prisoners huddled in dungeons, death-squad victims with their
hands tied behind their backs, often mutilated with knives and
electric drills, and distraught families searching for relations
who have been disappeared.
The Observer reported the same day that human rights
groups claimed to have hundreds of cases on their books
of Iraqis who had disappeared into the hands of government
security forces.
The violence has fueled the sectarian tensions between Shiites
and Sunnis. Sunni extremist groups such as Al Qaeda are carrying
out increasingly frequent suicide and car bombings on Shiite civilian
targets, killing and maiming hundreds every month. The New
York Times reported on November 20 that as many as 20 cities
and towns around Baghdad are segregating, with Sunni
and Shiite families having to abandon their homes in areas where
their sect was the minority.
The dirty war of death squads and torture could not be taking
place without the full knowledge of the White House, the US military
or the US intelligence agencies. The activities of the Iraqi government
are scrutinised by the largest American embassy in the world with
over 3,000 officials. US advisors have been slotted into every
ministry. For decades, the use of death squads has been a hallmark
of US operations from South East Asia to Latin America.
While there have been hypocritical expressions of shock over
the Baghdad torture centre from Washington, the primary motive
for the raid by the US military on November 13 was not to end
such activities. Rather, it appears to have been to weaken SCIRIs
position. The organisation has close links to Iran, one of the
next potential targets of American and British aggression.
Moreover, while SCIRI has collaborated fully with the occupation,
its influence in the government is viewed as an obstacle to convincing
more of the Sunni elite to end their support for the resistance
and accept a role in the US puppet state. American and British
plans to withdraw troops have been hinged on Iraqi government
forces being able to deal with the predominantly Sunni insurgency.
The UIA as a whole has been discredited by the confirmation
of the widespread rumours that the Shiite-dominated government
is repressing its rivals using almost identical methods as the
former Baathist regime. Hazim al-Nuaimy, a politics professor
at Baghdads Mustansiriya University told Reuters: The
prisoner torture scandal will have an impact on the prime minister
and his interior minister. It will have a negative impact on voting
for his list [the UIA] at the elections, at least among intellectuals
and the better educated.
Even before the November 13 raid, the UIAs electoral
prospects were declining. The two main factors in the large turnout
in the January election were a religious edict by Shiite cleric
Ali al-Sistani instructing Shiites to vote, and the UIAs
promises to demand a timetable for the withdrawal of foreign troops
and improve living standards. Daawa and SCIRI abandoned
their pledges as soon as the election was over. Their collaboration
with the occupation has produced widespread alienation among ordinary
Shiites. Reflecting the anger toward the governing parties, Sistani
has refused to endorse the UIA in the coming ballot.
The Bush administration has made no secret of whom it hopes
will benefit. Ahmed Chalabi and Iyad Allawi have both been promoted
in the US press as Washingtons favoured candidates to head
the next government. Both are longtime CIA assets and advocates
of the privatisation of the oil industry. They are secular Shiites
who have collaborated with the US plans to invade Iraq since 1991.
Allawi, an ex-Baathist, with ties to the Sunni establishment and
former Iraqi military, was installed by the White House as Iraqs
interim prime minister in 2004.
Chalabis return to prominence is particularly noteworthy.
In early 2004, as the Bush administration reversed his policy
of de-Baathification, Chalabi was pushed aside and accused of
being an Iranian spy. He developed relations with the Shiite fundamentalists
and secured the position of deputy prime minister in the government.
Last week, he was feted in Washington with private meetings with
Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice. The Washington Post referred to him on November 17
as the choice of many US officials.
Either Chalabi or Allawi would be considered by Washington
as a far more reliable prime minister than Jaafari or the SCIRI
leadership. After the December election, the primary tasks of
the first so-called sovereign government will be selling
off Iraqs oil to US energy corporations and sanctioning
permanent US military bases in the country. In a report published
this month, the London-based environmental and social justice
network Platform provided an insight into what is
at stake. The report revealed that foreign energy companies could
reap between $US74 billion and $194 billion in revenue over 30
years from the first 12 oil fields contracted out.
In order to secure Iraq for US interests, the American military
is continuing to unleash brutal offensives on rebellious areas
of the country. This month, 2,500 US marines and up to 1,500 Iraqi
government troops carried out assaults on Husayba, a town of 30,000
on the Iraq-Syria border near the major city of Qaim, and the
nearby towns of Karabilah and Ubaydi. The American Forces Press
Service reported they were clearing the city house by house.
Dozens of air strikes were carried out, reducing numbers of buildings
to rubble.
The purported targets were so-called foreign fighters
aligned with Al Qaeda crossing into Iraq from Syria to carry out
attacks on US forces. According to Iraqi doctors, however, dozens
of the dead were civilians, including women and children. At least
10 air strikes were launched on November 6 alone.
Thousands fled their homes to escape the bombardment. Karim
Ayaj, a teacher in Husayba, told CNN on November 13 that as many
as 28,000 people were living in palm groves and tents on the outskirts
of the town and suffering from shortages of food and medicine.
The areas being savaged by the US offensive are in the predominantly
Sunni Arab-populated Anbar province, where 97 percent of people
who voted in the October 15 referendum on a new constitution rejected
the US-vetted document. The province has been subjected to continuous
repression since the 2003 invasion. An unknown number of people,
possibly as many as 6,000, were killed during the marine assaults
on the city of Fallujah in April and November 2004. The capital
Ramadi has been the scene of constant American raids and clashes
between guerillas and US troops.
According to the US military, at least 700 alleged insurgents
have been killed during offensives against the resistance strongholds
along the Syrian border since September. No figure has been released
for civilian casualties. As many as 1,500 men have been detained.
On November 1, the US military admitted to holding 13,900 Iraqis
in custody.
Dozens of American families have also paid a bitter price.
The fighting has helped push US casualties to an average of three
dead and at least 20 wounded per day. The monthly toll for October96
dead and some 600 woundedwas the largest since January.
See Also:
More evidence of US dirty war in Iraq
Torture centre discovered in Baghdad
[18 November 2005]
Pentagon dismisses new report
on US military torture in Iraq
[30 September 2005]
Study documents US-inflicted
carnage on Iraqi people
[26 July 2005]
US rights group calls for
criminal probe of Rumsfeld
[27 April 2005]
New evidence of US torture
in Iraq and Afghanistan
[23 February 2005]
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