100 seized in mass Iraq kidnapping

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Nov 14, 2006, 5:27:31 PM11/14/06
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*Perilous Times*

Wednesday November 15, 1:17 AM Reuters
*
100 seized in mass Iraq kidnapping*

By Aseel Kami


BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Gunmen in Iraqi police uniforms rounded up as many
as 100 men at a government building in central Baghdad on Tuesday, in
what may be the biggest mass kidnap seen in a city becoming used to such
violence.

It bore the hallmarks of sectarian militias operating under cover of the
security forces, although senior officials and witnesses differed over
how far minority Sunnis were the target.

Interior Ministry spokesman Brigadier Abdul Kareem Khalaf said security
forces were hunting various districts of Baghdad for the kidnappers, who
he described as "criminal groups". He said at least three of those taken
had later been released.

Iraqiya state television reported the interior ministry had ordered the
arrest of the police commander and another senior officer in Karrada,
the district where the kidnapping happened.

Hours later a car bomb killed at least 10 people at a crowded central
market, and wounded 25, police said.

The kidnap attack on the Higher Education Ministry building was a new
blow to Iraq's battered universities, where dozens of professors have
been killed since the U.S. invasion.

Higher Education Minister Abd Dhiab said staff might now choose to stay
away from work, though he later denied that he was calling for a shutdown.

A witness who works in the building but had stepped out when the gunmen
arrived said he returned to see police standing idly by as the
kidnappers checked identity cards, apparently sorting Sunnis from
Shi'ites and then drove off with Sunni men.

However senior officials, often keen to play down sectarian tension,
said men from both Muslim sects were taken. Shi'ites were among
distraught relatives seeking information on missing family members after
the raid in the central Karrada district.

Another witness saw men struggle before being bundled away.

"It's a terrorist act. They kidnapped more than 100 employees and
visitors," said Dhiab, a member of the main Sunni Arab political bloc.

He told Reuters 13 of those initially taken had been released, and some
of them said the gunmen headed eastwards, in the direction of the
Shi'ite militia stronghold of Sadr City.

Both Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite militias have been blamed for mass
kidnappings in the past and on occasions gunmen have released some of
those initially seized, based on their sect.

Elsewhere, Iraqi officials said U.S. raids in a Shi'ite district of
Baghdad and in the Sunni insurgent stronghold of Ramadi killed six and
at least 30 people respectively overnight. The U.S. military had no
immediate comment.

PRESSURE

Unrelenting violence has added to the pressure on Prime Minister Nuri
al-Maliki to crack down on militias, some of which are linked to his
Shi'ite political allies.

U.S. President George W. Bush has also said he is open to "fresh
perspectives" to stem the violence in Iraq after his Republicans
suffered a "thumping" at midterm elections last week, partly due to
dismay over the war.

Numerous mass kidnappings have been blamed on gunmen operating either
within the security forces or with their help.

Saddam Hussein's once dominant Sunni minority and U.S. officials have
focussed suspicion on militias from the Shi'ite Muslim parties, who
control the Interior Ministry. The ministry has repeatedly denied
charges of links to Shi'ite militias.

Washington, under mounting domestic political pressure to start pulling
its 150,000 troops out of Iraq, has placed a heavy emphasis on
recruiting and training Iraqi security forces, but their competence and
sectarian loyalties remain in doubt.

Minister Dhiab said both Sunnis and Shi'ites were seized in the raid,
which cleared the four-storey building of all staff and visitors, from
directors to guards and teaboys. He said it was a well-planned operation
that took no more than 15 minutes.

Women were separated from the men and locked in a room after having
their mobile phones confiscated by the gunmen.

One witness, who is well known to a Reuters employee but did not want to
be identified for fear of retribution, said when he returned to the
building from an errand he saw around 40 pickup vehicles of the type
used by police commandos.

"They were checking identity cards in the car park. They picked only the
Sunni employees. They even took the man who was just delivering tea,"
said the witness, who is a Sunni Arab. "At the same time I saw two
police patrols watching, doing nothing."

Dhiab said the attack, which follows the assassination of several
leading academics in recent months, called into question the future of
the university system in Iraq. "How can I ask our employees to go to
their offices?" he said in parliament.

Academics contacted by Reuters said they had received no instructions as
yet but said the recent killings and kidnaps had already led to teachers
staying away and discussions on whether keeping their institutions open
was still a viable option.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed, Ibon Villelabeitia, Mussab
Al-Kharailla, Khaled al-Ramahi and Alastair Macdonald)

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