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MGGPillai  
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 More options Feb 22 2006, 7:35 pm
From: MGGPillai <pil...@streamyx.com>
Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 08:35:05 +0800
Local: Wed, Feb 22 2006 7:35 pm
Subject: [Independent] Destruction of holiest Shia shrine brings Iraq to the brink of civil war

The Independent, London

Destruction of holiest Shia shrine brings Iraq to the brink of civil war
By Patrick Cockburn
Published: 23 February 2006

Iraq took a lethal step closer to disintegration and civil war  
yesterday after a devastating attack on one of the country's holiest  
sites. The destruction of the golden-domed Shia shrine in Samarra  
sparked a round of bloody sectarian retaliation in which up to 60  
Sunni mosques were attacked and scores of people were killed or injured.

The bomb attack has enraged the majority Shia population, who regard  
the shrine in the same way that Roman Catholics view St Peter's in Rome.

In a number of respects civil war in Iraq has already begun. Many of  
the thousand bodies a month arriving in the morgues in Baghdad are of  
people killed for sectarian reasons. It is no longer safe for members  
of the three main communities the Sunni and Shia Arabs and the Kurds  
to visit each other's parts of the country.

"Iraq is in a Weimar period like Germany in the 1920s which will  
either end with the country disintegrating or in an authoritarian  
government taking power," said Ghassan Atiyyah, an Iraqi political  
commentator.

The Golden Mosque in Samarra, north of Baghdad, was attacked at  
6.55am yesterday when men dressed in police uniform tied up the  
guards and planted explosives. It was the third and most devastating  
attack on the Shia in Iraq in three days. A car bomb had killed 22  
people in a Shia district of Baghdad late the previous night. The day  
before 12 died when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a bus in the  
Shia stronghold of Khadamiyah in west Baghdad.

"We should stand hand in hand to prevent the danger of civil war,"  
warned President Jalal Talabani. "We are facing a major conspiracy  
that is targeting Iraq's unity." He called for the formation of a  
national unity government that "will bring stability to Iraq".

There was little sign of stability yesterday. Some 50 Sunni mosques  
were either burnt, blown up or taken over in Baghdad alone. At least  
three Sunni clerics were among 22 reported deaths nationwide.

Gunmen in police uniforms seized a dozen Sunni men suspected of being  
insurgents from a prison in the mainly Shia city of Basra yesterday  
and later killed 11 of them. Among those killed in the apparent  
reprisal attack for the bombing of the Samarra shrine were two  
Egyptians.

Armed militiamen of the Mehdi Army supporting the radical nationalist  
clergyman Muqtada al-Sadr took up positions on the streets of Baghdad  
and in the Shia cities of the south yesterday. Mr Al-Sadr himself is  
returning quickly to Iraq after cancelling a meeting with the  
Lebanese President. One of his aides said: "If the Iraqi government  
does not do its job to defend the Iraqi people, we are ready to do  
so." A Sunni politician, Tariq al-Hashimi, urged clerics and  
politicians to calm the situation " before it spins out of control".

As news spread of sectarian clashes and demonstrations people in  
Baghdad rushed home before dark and some started to stock up on food.  
In Najaf, another Shia holy city, protesters chanted: "Rise up Shia!  
Take revenge! "

The destruction of the Golden Mosque will be an immense psychological  
blow to Iraqi Shia who have endured so much down the centuries. The  
shrine contains the tombs of the 10th and 11th imams, Ali al-Hadi who  
died AD868 and his son Hassan Ali al-Askari who died AD874. His son,  
the last of the 12 Shia imams, Mohammed al-Mahdi, disappeared and is  
known as the "hidden imam". Shias believe he is still alive and will  
bring justice to humanity.

The shrine is very difficult to defend. The majority of people in  
Samarra are Sunni and in 2004 the city was taken by Islamic  
extremists before being recaptured by the Americans. Although I was  
searched the last time I visited the mosque, it has large gateways  
through the outer wall into an inner courtyard which armed men would  
find easy to storm. The shrine guards, who might detect a single  
bomber, were evidently not able to stop a unit of armed and  
determined men posing as police.

In one of the most serious acts of retaliation Shia protesters set  
fire yesterday to a famous Sunni shrine on the outskirts of Basra. It  
contains the tomb of Talha bin-Obeid-Allah, a companion of the  
Prophet Mohamed. The extent of the damage was not known.

Iraq has always been riven by sectarian divisions. Saddam Hussein's  
regime was primarily Sunni, though they are only 20 per cent of the  
population, while the Shia were politically marginalised. Friction  
between Shia and Sunni has increased since the US invasion as the  
Sunni resisted the occupation while the Shia demanded elections which  
they were bound to win because they are a majority of the population.  
If the Shia do hold power it will be the first time they have had  
their own state in the Arab world since the 12th century.

The parliamentary election on 15 December confirmed the Shia  
dominance, with their coalition winning 128 out of 275 seats. The  
vote was almost entirely along sectarian or ethnic lines.

The Shia clerical leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, called for  
a week of mourning, forbade attacks on Sunni mosques and asked people  
to protest peacefully. He made a rare appearance on television  
yesterday, being shown meeting in his house in Najaf three other  
grand ayatollahs to discuss the destruction of the mosque in Samarra.  
There was no audio but a statement from Ayatollah Sistani's office  
said: "We call upon believers to express their protest ... through  
peaceful means. The extent of their sorrow and shock should not drag  
them into taking actions that serve the enemies who have been working  
to lead Iraq into sectarian strife."

In the past his appeals for calm have been heeded, despite a long  
series of atrocities by suicide bombers against the Shia beginning in  
August 2003 which has left several thousand dead.

There are signs that the Shias' patience is now growing thin. Death  
squads targeting Sunni operate in Baghdad.

The prolonged negotiations to form a new government underlines the  
difficulty the Shia, Kurds and Sunni are having in reaching an  
accommodation which will hold Iraq together. The Kurds have always  
demanded a degree of autonomy under a federal system which would give  
them quasi-independence. Under the constitution supported in a  
referendum by Kurds and Shia last October, the nine Shia provinces of  
the south would also become a canton largely independent of Baghdad.  
One Iraqi minister laments that "the Iraqi government may end up as a  
collection of buildings in the Green Zone" .

Although the US and the Kurds are demanding a national unity  
government, Shia leaders suspect that this is a manoeuvre by the US  
to keep them out of power. Washington has long been worried that the  
outcome of its invasion and overthrow of Saddam would be a Shia-
dominated Islamic republic closely linked to Iran. It is also  
concerned with the rise of Mr al-Sadr, always against the occupation,  
to the position of power broker in the Shia coalition.

There are signs of increasing anti-American feeling among the Shia as  
they see the Americans allying themselves with the Sunni. As news  
spread of the attack on the Golden Mosque yesterday, thousands of  
young men marched shouting anti-American slogans through Sadr City,  
the great Shia slum with a population of two million. About 3,000  
people marched through the Shia city of Kut shouting slogans against  
America and Israel and burning US and Israeli flags.

The extent of Shia retaliation may also depend on the Iranian  
government. The Iranian supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, urged  
Shia not to seek revenge against Sunni Muslims, saying there were  
definite plots "to force the Shia to attack the mosques and other  
properties respected by the Sunni. Any measure to contribute to that  
direction is helping the enemies of Islam and is forbidden by sharia."

Instead Ayatollah Khamenei blamed the intelligence services of the US  
and Israel for being behind the bombs in Samarra.

© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited


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