Apr 17, 9:19 PM EDT
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17 Decomposing Bodies Found in Ramadi*
By BASSEM MROUE
Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD (AP) -- Police in Ramadi uncovered 17 decomposing corpses buried
beneath two schoolyards in a district that until recently was under the
control of al-Qaida fighters. At least 85 people were killed or found
dead across the country Tuesday.
The adult bodies were discovered in the Anbar provincial capital after
students and teachers returned to the schools a week ago and noticed an
increasingly putrid odor and stray dogs digging in the area, Police Maj.
Laith al-Dulaimi said.
He said one body had not yet been recovered from a separate burial site
behind one of the schools because authorities feared it was
booby-trapped with a bomb.
Ramadi had been a stronghold of Sunni insurgents and al-Qaida fighters
until recently, when the U.S. forces in the region and the Iraqi
government successfully negotiated with many local tribal leaders to
split them off from the more militant insurgent groups.
Thousands of young Sunni men have joined the police force in Anbar
province and have taken up the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq,
the umbrella organization that includes al-Qaida.
In a sign that Shiite death squads are on the move again after more than
two months of quiescence, 25 bodies, most tortured, were found dumped in
Baghdad on Tuesday. Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr ordered his
six Cabinet ministers Monday to quit the government.
In addition to the deaths in Baghdad and Ramadi, officials reported at
least 42 other people were killed or found dead across Iraq Tuesday in
nearly two dozen other violent incidents at sites that included Mosul,
Fallujah, Baqouba and Tal Afar.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, meanwhile, said his government was
talking with some Sunni insurgent groups, including members of Saddam
Hussein's former regime, as he struggled to reconcile disaffected and
violent bands of fighters.
And in separate attempts to ease sectarian divisions, a group of senior
Sunni Muslim clerics visited Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani, in the holy city of Najaf. They emerged from the meeting
and said followers of the two sects were "brothers."
"Everybody's aim is to extinguish the fire of strife in our country.
This is our call to everyone," said Sheik Mohammed Talabani, head of the
Clerics Association in Kurdistan.
Iraq's Sunni mufti, Sheik Jamaluddin al-Dabban, said al-Sistani sent his
regards to all Sunni scholars in the country. "We call for unity,"
al-Dabban said.
A third cleric from the Kurdish city of Irbil, Sheik Ali al-Khafaji,
said: "Our aim is Iraq's unity. There is no difference between Sunnis
and Shiites. They are all our brothers."
Sunni clerics have frequently visited al-Sistani in the past. This time
they also visited three other top Shiite clerics in Najaf.
Al-Maliki did not name the groups with which his government was in
contact but said he hoped the discussions laid the groundwork for
reconciliation during a major meeting on Iraq scheduled for May 3-4 in
the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheik.
"We are having meetings with groups that are not part of the political
process. ... They asked us not to reveal their names," al-Maliki told
reporters at his office in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone.
Meanwhile, hundreds of residents of Basra, Iraq's second-largest city,
crowded into a huge tent erected Tuesday in front of the governor's
office for the start of a three-day sit-in to demand his resignation.
"This governor is a hypocrite. We want him to come out!" the angry mob
shouted. "We demand the Basra governor resign," read a banner hung from
the tent. Gov. Mohammed al-Waili was not believed to be in the building.
The peaceful sit-in began a day after thousands of people paraded from a
downtown mosque to al-Waili's office in a demonstration that defied
orders from Baghdad officials. Residents of Basra, 340 miles southeast
of Baghdad, have long complained of poor city services - garbage pickup,
water and electricity.
Demands for al-Waili's ouster were thought to stem from political
disagreements as well. He is a member of a rival Shiite faction to that
of al-Sadr, the rebellious but extremely popular cleric who commands
tremendous influence over Iraq's majority Shiites.
On Monday, al-Sadr's six ministers quit the Iraqi Cabinet to protest
al-Maliki's refusal to back calls for a timetable for U.S. withdrawal.
The U.S. military on Tuesday announced the death of a Marine from a
"non-hostile incident" while on combat patrol in western Anbar province.
The incident occurred Monday and was under investigation.