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Sceptical After Second Shrine Attack
by Ali al-Fadhily The second bombing of the Shiite shrine of al-Askari in Samarra, Iraq, last week brought reprisal attacks, but it also brought solidarity against the occupiers.
The golden shrine, located in downtown Samarra which is 125 km north of Baghdad, was first bombed on Feb. 22, 2006. The attack, which nearly totally destroyed the main dome, sparked massive violence. Over 1,300 people were killed in revenge attacks in the few tumultuous days that followed the bombing, and hundreds of thousands were displaced.
"I am not
sure who is doing this and I do not have the habit of speculating, but
now I, and most Iraqis, are sure it is just a conspiracy to divide
Iraqis into Shiite and Sunnis. All this was planned and paid for by
people outside our country and community."
BAGHDAD, Jun 20 (IPS) - The belief among Shia Muslims is that the saviour Mahdi will come
back to life from within the shrine, where two of their holy imams are
buried. The Iraqi cities of Najaf, Kerbala and Baghdad also have Shia
shrines with golden domes where Imams, descendents of the prophet, are
buried.
The Jun. 13 bombing that targetted the shrine's minarets
were despite heavy Iraqi security presence and the U.S. military
continuing to impose a curfew on the city of Samarra.
The
bombing last year was widely believed by Shiite to have been carried
out by Sunni extremist groups, like al-Qaeda, who maintain a goal of
stoking sectarian strife in Iraq.
However, the repercussions of
the second bombing of the shrine have thus far been limited to a few
attacks on Sunni mosques in Basra and Baghdad.
"We now realise
the plot more than we did before," Mustafa Hussain from the
predominately Shia area of Sadr City in Baghdad told IPS, "I am not
sure who is doing this and I do not have the habit of speculating, but
now I, and most Iraqis, are sure it is just a conspiracy to divide
Iraqis into Shiite and Sunnis. All this was planned and paid for by
people outside our country and community."
After the bombing,
the Iraqi government immediately imposed curfew across Baghdad and
several other Iraqi cities, in addition to dispatching large numbers of
Iraqi troops to Samarra.
Nevertheless, many Iraqis believe the bombing was not carried out by al-Qaeda.
"They
are dreaming of evicting the people of Samarra in order to deepen the
wound in the Iraqi flesh," 35-year-old Yassir al-Samarrai'i, a local
television reporter from Samarra told IPS in Baghdad, "Their problem is
that Iraqis are still reluctant to engage in full scale civil war
despite all the dirty business the occupiers have conducted to ignite
it by these shrine explosions."
The Mehdi Army militia of Shiite
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr guarded the area of Khadamiyah in Baghdad, which
is the site of another shrine. In several instances, Shia militiamen
confronted U.S. military personnel in the area, but there was little
fighting.
That the Samarra shrine was bombed yet again displayed
the Iraqi government's impotence in defending important locations. The
Iraqi police responsible for shrine security were detained for
questioning in order to ascertain why the bombing occurred.
"I
am a Shiite, but I know for sure that Sunnis have the same respect we
have for holy shrines and they would never do anything to humiliate
their sacred status," 29-year-old Ruqaya Salih told IPS in Baghdad,
"Americans must know that there are Iraqis who realise that they are
planning to divide the community."
Al-Sadr, who has a bloc of 30
members of parliament, instructed them to withdraw from the government
in order to protest the bombing last week. The MP's pulled out and
announced they would remain out of the government until it takes
"realistic steps" to rebuild the shrine.
Very little
reconstruction had been carried out since last years bombing of the
shrine, a fact that has angered both the Shia and Sunni communities.
In stark contrast to the bombing of the shrine last year, IPS found many instances of solidarity between the two sects.
"They
attacked ten mosques in Basra including the one that has the grave of
Talha Bin Obaidillah, Mohammad's companion," Sheik Abdul-Wahab Hassan
in Baghdad told IPS, "Sunnis will not fall for such acts, knowing the
fact that their Shiite brothers would not commit such crimes except
those Shiite who collaborate with the occupying forces and Iran."
Many residents from Samarra who IPS spoke with in Baghdad blamed the occupation forces for allowing the bombing to happen.
"We
keep blaming the occupying forces and their Iraqi allies in the
government for all that because it is their responsibility to provide
peace and order," a member of municipal council of Samarra, speaking on
condition of anonymity, told IPS, "This cannot go on for long and we
can feel Iraqis are becoming more inclined to violence against U.S.
forces each time things go wrong against sacred places in the country."
(*Ali,
our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with Dahr
Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who travels
extensively in the region)
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