Iraqi Shiite militia warns of sectarian fighting

A senior member of an Iraqi Shiite militia that once fought the US military warned Wednesday that Iraq is heading toward widespread sectarian bloodletting similar to the kind that once pushed the country to the brink of civil war.

May 29, 2013
Iraqi Shiite militia warns of sectarian fighting
Iraqi Shiite militia warns of sectarian fighting

Sahoub Baghdadi

 


 


BAGHDAD — A senior member of an Iraqi Shiite militia that once fought the US military warned Wednesday that Iraq is heading toward widespread sectarian bloodletting similar to the kind that once pushed the country to the brink of civil war.



The head of the political bureau of the Asaib Ahl Al-Haq group, Adnan Faihan, also said the militia is preparing to defend itself, but denied the group’s involvement in a spate of attacks targeting Iraq’s Sunni Arab minority.



Iraq has been wracked by a wave of the most sustained violence the country has seen since American troops left in late 2011. The bloodshed, which includes coordinated car bombings blamed on Sunni militants as well as a string of attacks on Sunni mosques, is raising fears that Iraq is slipping back toward all-out sectarian fighting like that which nearly tore the country apart at its peak in 2006 and 2007.



“We have major concerns. Because what is going on now is the same that led to what happened in 2006,” Faihan told The Associated Press. “We are ready for it and we are ready to protect our people.”



Faihan made the comments on the sidelines of a press conference it held in Baghdad under heavy guard by camouflage-clad militia members.



During the event, Faihan distanced the group from recent attacks against Sunnis, saying such allegations were the result of a misleading defamation campaign.



He railed against what he called a Turkish-Qatari agenda to create sectarian strife again and to divide Iraq — a reference to Sunni countries many Shiites accuse of backing members of Iraq’s Sunni community who have been holding months of protests against the Shiite-led government.



Years ago, Asaib Ahl Al-Haq — or the Band of the Righteous — broke away from radical Shiite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr’s political bloc and has been trying to morph into a legitimate political movement.



It said in late 2011 it was moving away from armed struggle after US forces left but it has not handed over its weapons. It and the Hezbollah Brigades were among a group of Shiite militias backed by Iran that carried out lethal attacks against US bases in the summer of 2011.



Also on Wednesday, Iraqi officials raised the death toll from attacks the previous day that shook Baghdad and towns north of the capital to 28.



Police said the deadliest of Tuesday’s attacks struck the southern Dora neighborhood, where back-to-back bombings killed nine people and wounded 10. Bombs in the eastern neighborhood of Sadr City and in the northern Shaab area killed 12 and wounded 33.



Blasts and shootings in Tarmiyah and Mosul killed seven other people. A relentless wave of violence has edged Iraq closer to all-out internal warfare. On Monday, attacks killed more than 70 people. More than 450 have died this month. — AP


May 29, 2013
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