DIWANIYAH, Iraq, Nov 27 (IPS) - There has been a spike in abductions being carried out by
U.S. and Iraqi forces in Diwaniyah, capital of Iraqs Al-Qadisiyah
province and home to a population of roughly 400,000.
On Nov. 13, the International Committee of the Red Cross estimated that 60,000 people are currently detained in Iraq.
U.S.
officials claim that the military has been actively fighting against
members of the Mehdi Army militia of anti-occupation cleric Muqtada
al-Sadr.
People here told a different story to IPS.
"If
they mean the Mehdi Army then they know them well because they worked
together for about two years now," Abdul Kazem Hussein, a former Iraqi
officer who fled to Baghdad from Diwaniyah recently told IPS.
Hussein
claimed that the U.S. military had been using members of the Mehdi Army
to carry out attacks on Sunnis in Baghdad, as well as areas south of
Baghdad, like Diwaniyah.
"But they are detaining hundreds of
people who have always been afraid of being drilled to death by Mehdi
Army murderers," Hussein explained, alluding to a practice used by
Mehdi Army members of using electric drills to torture Sunni men they
capture.
"They are detaining those who have not accepted the influence of Iran in the city," Hussein said.
Bassam
Al-Shareef, a spokesman for the Shiite party -- Al-Fadhila --
criticized the campaign and warned the Iraqi government of the
consequences if the campaign against the Mehdi Army continues this way.
"We
believe the government should take slower actions to contain the
militias rather than lead such a harsh campaign," Shareef told IPS in
Baghdad.
The leaders of the Iraqi Army unit in charge of the
crackdown -- the Al-Baqir Brigade -- said they are determined to
conduct their offensive to the end.
"We will detain all suspects
in Diwaniyah and chase those who fled to hide in the surrounding
villages," Colonel Othman of the brigades staff told journalists in
Baghdad recently, "Our intelligence will lead us to all those who are
wanted for questioning."
The question of whether the offensive
is targeting the Mehdi Army or the Arab Shiites in Diwaniyah was best
answered by local politician Hassan Al-Mayali who recently fled to
Baghdad.
"This offensive is targeting all those who do not
follow Iranian Cleric [Grand Ayatollah] Ali Al-Sistani," Mayali told
IPS, "Americans, Iranians and the so-called Iraqi government felt the
danger of those Shiites who rejected the influence of what they call
the peaceful clerics and they are pressing hard to make them accept
their leadership. Any Iraqi who does not keep his mouth shut will be
detained or assassinated so that the separation plan and the ever
lasting occupation will succeed."
Many Iraqis interviewed felt
sure that after the bombing of the Golden Shrines in Samarra in
February 2006, the armed wing of the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council
(SIIC) -- the Badr Organization -- worked with the Mehdi Army to kill
thousands of Sunnis.
Millions were also displaced from their homes in cities of southern Iraq -- including Baghdad.
"Muqtada sold us to Iran," a former member of the Mehdi Army, speaking on condition of anonymity, told IPS in Diwaniyah.
"We
are Arabs and the wave of killings conducted by us was committed for
money paid by the Badr Organization and Iran. Now the Badr Organization
is getting the American Army to help detain and kill us because we did
not follow the orders given to us to kill our Sunni brothers," the
former Mehdi Army member said.
"We are still obeying the orders
given by our leader Muqtada Al Sadr to maintain peace, but that will
not be forever," a member of the movement, speaking on condition of
anonymity, in Sadr City in eastern Baghdad told IPS, "They [SIIC] are
trying our patience and there will be a strong reaction if they do not
stop their organized campaign against us."
On Nov. 25, Abdul
Aziz al-Hakim -- the powerful Shia cleric who leads the SIIC --
defended Iran against U.S. accusations that the country is involved in
anti-U.S. attacks in Iraq.
"These are only accusations raised by
the multinational forces and I think these accusations need more
proof," al-Hakim, the head of the largest Shiite party in Iraq, told
reporters.
Al-Hakim has established ties with Iran and is one of
its staunchest supporters in Iraq, but he also has been a major partner
in U.S. efforts during the occupation.
Ali al-Fadhily,
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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