Handing Basra to the Militias! (Full Version)

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Lion of Babylon -> Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 5:21:22 AM)

quote:


Fierce clashes break out in Basrahttp://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7312078.stm 


Basra has now been lost to the Militias. The Brits are now refusing to involve themselves in what they consider as "an internal issue". Maliki has imposed a curfew and promises to clamp down and reimpose the law. Yaba Ba3ad Wakit!  

The full scale of the chaos left behind by British forces in Basra is now revealing itself and the city is now firmly in the hands of extremely well armed militias strong enough to overpower security forces and brutal enough to behead women considered not sufficiently Islamic. 

Last December the new police chief of Basra was interviewed by Independent Television of the UK and he said as follows: 

quote:


Major General Jalil Khalaf, the new police commander, said the occupation had left him with a situation close to mayhem. "They left me militia, they left me gangsters, and they left me all the troubles in the world,"


As the interview continued the new security chief then stated the following:
  
quote:


The main problem the Iraqi security forces now faced was the struggle to wrest control back from the militia. He appealed for the British to help him do that


This was back in December! Khalaf has now survived 28 assassination attempts since he became police chief 9 months ago and its only now that Maliki decides to show his face. Khalaf is a very brave Iraqi Patriot and should be treated like a hero. Our puppet government and the occupying British forces should be giving him all the logistical and Military support he needs to do his job but then I guess we have to conclude that they don't want him to succeed. Shame on them!




NeoBabylonian -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 8:10:35 AM)

Is Maliki going to impose a new "Security Crackdown" [:D] LMAO
That seems to be his faverout phrase, and "produces no kids" (yield no results) like his marriage to Ahmadinejad. [:D] 

I totally agree with you bro, surviving 28 assassination attempts, and staying in the job requires real patriotism, not at all just greed for money. The police chief is a patriotic hero in my eyes too, and deserves so much more.




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 8:30:18 AM)

this is fact that basrah is now like gangster city. my best frend is basrawi and he makes his sisters move 2 bagdad to live with his ant because he is worry that the militia army will kill her. thank u for showing this report. mr khalaf is realy 1 of the heros of iraq. all good ppl of basrah love him. ishalla god will protect him and all good ppl of basrah.




MarkOfTheBeast -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 12:00:45 PM)

Dear Abujassim,
 
Yes indeed today I was on the phone with a friend in Basrah, I was told that Fierce gun fight started last night at 24:00 hrs, may god save all the good people of Iraq, looking to a day that peace and harmony will replace hate and suspicion between the good people of Iraq. There is a problem, what is that problem I really don’t know; the people of Iraq are not cohesive in their attitudes, since the start of the occupation, Sunni’s started to hate shiaa’a, and equally valid, distrust is running deep in the Iraqi society, who is responsible for this mayhem, who is benefiting from the divide and rule policy, are we as a people a major players or we have change to toys played with? Do we as a nation bare some burden of what’s happening to us? Are we allowing foreigners to take over our country so cheaply? For god sake are we true Iraqis??????????????????????????????????????? Iraq is a dieing country with no body willing to put this ailing country to rest. In twenty years from now there will be no people called Iraqis, and no country by the name of Iraq.    [:o][:o][:o][:o][:o][X(]




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 3:18:36 PM)

The news from Basra is not looking good. Violence is now spreading to neighboring towns and villages and Sadr just threatened a nationwide campaign of civil disobedience. If anyone has any updates please post them here. 




Calm -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 6:17:02 PM)

I just spoke to my brother, and the situation is very critical.  People are frightened that it will spread everywhere.  There was fighting in Kute, the latest I heard.

Haven't the people of Iraq had enough fighting? Enough killing?




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/25/2008 11:35:47 PM)

Thanks Calm. Here are the latest developments as of 5am Jordan time:




1. In the al Timimiyah neighborhood, government forces surrounded a Mahdi Army stronghold and the home of the Rwaymi family, who residents said are well-known oil smugglers and supporters of the militia.

2. In al Qibla, just west of the city center, the Mahdi Army repelled attacks by Iraqi security forces, burned military vehicles and took weapons, residents said. The militia also briefly took control of a police station.

3. In the al Jamiyat neighborhood, gunmen seized the Iraqi army headquarters near al Manaseer Mosque, a few miles west of the city center.

4. In central Basra, gunmen took control of some of the main streets and spread out on rooftops.

5. Medical officials estimated that 10 to 20 people were killed and that 100 were wounded in the fighting. But with most hospitals and the morgue barely functioning amid the fighting, it was impossible to get an accurate tally of the casualties. Militiamen carrying rocket-propelled grenades took over many of the streets, preventing residents from leaving their homes.

6. In the al Hussainiyah neighborhood, bodies were stored in the mosque. "It is not possible to evacuate them now," said Abdul Zahra Shghati, a 60-year-old resident.

7. In Baghdad , the Mahdi Army all but closed down the neighborhoods it controls in an act of protest against the government. Militiamen attacked the headquarters of a rival Shiite group, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and its military wing, the Badr Organization .

8. In west and south Baghdad and in the southern city of Najaf, Sadrists took to the streets in protest against the government.

9. In Najaf, protesters chanted, "Oh Nouri, you coward. You spy of the Americans" and "The army is with America..."




MarkOfTheBeast -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/26/2008 2:06:17 AM)

Dear Lion of Babylon,
 
A Pleasant day to you my friend, thanks for the up date, wish that the good people of Basrah would be safe from harm.[8|][:o][:o]




NeoBabylonian -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/27/2008 5:48:24 PM)

I honestly can't believe they are actually letting this happen!
How the hell do they just allow a bunch of stupid, brainwashed criminals calling themselves a militia and fronting as a Shia resistance take over the biggest city?

I'm guessing the pathetic armaments of the Iraqi Security Forces. Any other country would just roll a few heavy tanks (resistant to RPG's, like the M1A1) and crush this once and for all. Same goes for most other terrorist forces there. But thanks to Maliki, our budget is used to appease our Iranian masters rather than buy proper military hardware. The ISAF are no better armed than the militias, are less motivated than those crazies, and are less experienced at Urban Guerilla warfare.
I'm expecting more ISF casualties by the time we take it back - if it wont turn out as a pathetic failure.

My hopes and prayers are with the brave, honourable people of Basra, and I wish them the least suffering after this siege.




Iraqi100Percent -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/28/2008 3:34:55 AM)

Muqtada is a caward and a gangster. His actions have desroyed this family name forever

he will hide in iran leaving countless dead people and at the last minute him and the iraqi government will come to some $$deal$$ and manage to save their faces. Maliki will go after Sunni areas to show his ugly racisit face and I say racist because he is not Iraq but an Iranian with an American blood.

If the mahdi army obeys sadr this time they are the most pathetic and they have proven to be nothing but street gangs rather than a national force protecting the poor.

Whoever wins this round, Iraq remain in Iran's pocket

God I wish for this pathetic government to end and eat itself from the inside out, it's rotten in every askect and the head of the rot is maliki who is becoming even more brutal than saddam himself. Can you imagine himself, a school teacher go to basrah to supervise an operation like this? give another 30 years and the next dictator will be a begger on the streets of baghdad.

Can't they amend the constitution to at least require some professional degree with a proven record for someone to be a prime minister than someone who ran an iranian elementary school in baghdad and then ran to syria o hide there, came back on the american tanks and protected by iranian militias?

maliki if you are reading this line pay attention, whatever saddam did to iraq in 30 years was a fraction to what you have done to this country in 4 years. You are an american puppet and history will always remember you this way.

Dawa Party is the new Baathis of Iraq




MarkOfTheBeast -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/28/2008 4:18:12 AM)

Dear Iraqi 100 percent and all forum members,
 It is an Irony to see the yesterday oppressed becoming today’s oppressor, it is true that the Mahdi Army is a Militia which is full of thugs, but there are not the only militia which is full of thugs in Iraq, The Da3wa Party is full of thugs, the Quods Army is full of thugs, Al Bader Brigade is full of them as well, also not to forget Sunni Militia’s as well, hence what is the reason for sticking with Mahdi Army only?, the new Iraqi politician and unfortunately (90%) of them were a bunch of Taxi drivers, Pizza delivery boys, and butchers with long working experience in the streets of the European & American cities who suddenly changed to become  Parliament members ( I could mention names and previous professional backgrounds), Diplomats, Ministers etc. One the great reasons for this mess in Iraq is the total lack of Statesmen who could think wisely for the good of their people, (In god we trust[:D]) is the applied rule, so if a previous Iraqi Prime Minster caught with 920,000 USD in of the European air ports ( I was present in the airport when he was caught), we would close our eyes and let this matter to pass away, hopelessly!, now an Iraqi Prime Minster has successfully completed the buying procedure of a huge mansion with a price tag of 6,000,000 $ ( money of the poor) – and I don’t know how in hell a teacher as you mentioned will afford to buy such a thing!, As people we would say, you dirty politicians, close your eyes and remember what happened to Saddam[:D][:D][:D][8|]




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/28/2008 1:34:07 PM)

the great leader maliki now give more time for mehdi army to hand over guns. he will even pay them????? why dont he just finish the job so we can all breath again??? i hate him & all iraqi goverment. after this no militia will respect him & in the end the jaish mehdi will win this fite & basrah will b completly iranian. iraq is finished. there is no more iraq. better 2 call it militiastan.[:o][:'(][:(][:@][X(]




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (3/30/2008 2:07:01 PM)


What a farce.  Let’s try to make sense of what’s happening here by taking developments step by step.

First Maliki surprises everyone by displaying some courage by arriving in Basra to personally oversee the campaign to disarm all Cartels and Militias operating out of the city.  As the operation begins he solidifies his strong stance by giving the Militias 72 hours to lay down their weapons or face “dire consequences. He even said, and I quote "We entered this battle with determination and we will continue to the end. No retreat. No talks. No negotiations." By now I was actually starting to believe him. So far so good!

Sadr then defies the Iraqi government by calling for a national campaign of disobedience demanding that the government apply the general amnesty law, release detainees and stop what he called illegal raids.

Maliki then decides to put his balls back in his trousers and confuses everyone by extending the deadline till April 8. What’s more he offers the Mahdi thugs financial incentives to lay down their weapons.

Whilst these two jokers exchange demands the violence escalates and spreads as far north as Baghdad. Many of the Army and police start deserting because they don’t want to fight their brothers in the Mahdi Army.

Today Sadr does another u-turn and said in a statement that his movement wanted the Iraqi people to stop the bloodshed and maintain the nation's independence and stability. In a statement issued today he says "Anyone carrying a weapon and targeting government institutions will not be one of us." 


It appears to me that retard Muqtada, who is making these statements from the comfort of his home in Iran, is starting to realise that he is a spent force and has no control over his own Militia. His great Mahdi Army are no longer listening to their leader and he knows it, but he can't stop pretending he's still in charge. This is a great opportunity for the Iraqi government to finish this and put Sadr’s scumbag Militia away for good but I strongly doubt Maliki has the stomach for this fight and would prefer to make a deal under the table. Ya3ni in the end all this will be for nothing.




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/1/2008 6:10:57 AM)

i do not agree sorry. sadr said jump and jam say how hi. i think sadr is getting stronger and not weaker. as soon as he say stop the fighting all basra and baghdad jam stop and go back home. sadr is very strong in iraq now. maliki is nothing. iraaq is now very sick and there is no medicin for our desease. god help iraq if sadr can issue fatwas.




MarkOfTheBeast -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/2/2008 1:52:34 AM)

Dear abujassim,
 
A Pleasant Day, Here you go, well said, you have answered my question,  now you have said the reason for sticking with Mahdi Army Only! The so called Iraqi elections are getting closer and closer, and our thugs who used to make fun of (Abu Al Thaleeg) , tasted the sweetness of power and money, they want it , and they want it badly, the worst of all these people are the Da3waa party and the thugs of Hakim. [8|][8|][8|][8|][8|][sm=smiley20.gif][sm=smiley9.gif][sm=smiley36.gif][sm=smiley21.gif]




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/2/2008 12:52:22 PM)

all militias dawa-jam-badr are the same but sadr and jam are the superstar like american idol. why? do u like jam or something?




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/2/2008 2:30:40 PM)

oh pls!! who dos he think he is kiding? [:@]

Iraqi PM: Basra operation a 'success' By BUSHRA JUHI, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD - Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, returning from the southern city of Basra, claimed Tuesday that a week-old operation against Shiite militias has been a "success" despite a cease-fire that did not disarm the gunmen and left him politically battered. The Shiite leader stopped short of declaring an end to the offensive that began a week ago Tuesday in Basra, sparking retaliatory clashes in Baghdad and other southern cities, and criticism that his government was unprepared for the fierce backlash. Militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr, meanwhile, thanked his fighters for "defending your people, your land and your honor."

Sporadic fighting continued in Baghdad and Basra, but the cities otherwise were calm two days after the radical Shiite cleric called on his fighters to stand down in a bid to end the widening conflict. A U.S. helicopter fired a missile at gunmen attacking ground forces in the Baghdad militia stronghold of Sadr City, killing six militants, the military said. Iraqi police and witnesses said three civilians were killed in the strike.

Amid the tensions, Britain's Defense Secretary Des Browne said a plan to withdraw around 1,500 troops based mainly around Basra has been postponed. Browne said it would be "prudent" to pause any further reductions while the situation was unfolding. Ground forces called for the airstrike in Sadr City after gunmen fired at a tank and rolled a burning tire in their direction, said Maj. Mark Cheadle, a military spokesman in Baghdad.

Iraqi police said U.S. troops opened fire them hours later in Sadr City, killing three unarmed men and wounding six people, including two children. Cheadle denied U.S. forces were involved in such an incident. Al-Maliki insisted in the statement issued by his office that the operation had achieved "security, stability and success" in Basra.

He announced a seven-point plan to stabilize the area, including recruiting 10,000 more police and army forces from local tribes and moving to enhance public services for the embattled population of some 2 million. The prime minister's office later issued another statement asserting that the offensive was "legitimate."

"We fulfilled our security commitments and responsibilities, which paved the way toward law enforcement and security," he said.

Al-Maliki returned to Baghdad on Tuesday a week after launching the offensive in Basra, said Ali al-Moussawi, head of Iraq's National Media Center. The fighting in the capital and cities to the south has helped make March the deadliest month for Iraqis since last summer, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press. At least 1,247 Iraqis, including civilians and security personnel, were killed last month as of Monday, according to figures compiled from police and U.S. military reports. The figure was nearly double the tally for February and the biggest monthly toll since August, when 1,956 people died violently.

Iraqi government figures showed a similar trend, with at least 1,079 people killed in March — 923 civilians, 156 security forces. That was an increase from 718 the month before, including 633 civilians and 85 security forces, according to figures compiled from data provided by officials at the health, interior and defense ministries.

Underscoring the fragility of the peace agreement, Harith al-Edhari, the director of al-Sadr's office in Basra, demanded the government stop continuing random raids and detentions against the cleric's Mahdi Army militia. Al-Edhari's complaint followed a raid by Iraqi commandos on the house of a wanted Mahdi Army battalion leader that prompted clashes in a northern section of the city, although the suspect was not home at the time.

In ordering his militia to stop fighting on Sunday, al-Sadr also demanded concessions from the Iraqi government, including an end to the "illegal raids and arrests" of his followers and the release of all detainees who have not been convicted of any offenses. "God bless you and thanks to you from God and not from me for your enduring hardship and for your patience, obedience and being side by side defending your people and your land and your honor," al-Sadr said Monday.

"And greetings for mujahedden (holy fighters) who do not leave a secure place for the enemy," he added, referring to the battle against U.S. forces. The confrontation enabled al-Sadr to show that he remains a powerful force capable of challenging the Iraqi government, the Americans and mainstream Shiite parties that have sought for years to marginalize him. And the outcome cast doubt on President Bush's assessment that the Basra battle was "a defining moment" in the history "of a free Iraq."

With gunmen again off the streets, a round-the-clock curfew imposed in Baghdad last week was lifted at 6 a.m. Monday, except in Sadr City and two other Shiite neighborhoods. Streets of the capital buzzed with traffic and commerce. Iraqis also cautiously emerged on the streets of Basra, with peddlers selling fruit from stalls and men cleaning up huge piles of trash from the roadsides. Women shrouded in black and children also lined up to collect water and food from aid workers after days of curfew.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/iraq;_ylt...G9Q3BZblBX6GMA




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/9/2008 5:05:09 AM)

Before I start my ramblings please take time to read this short report:

quote:


Turncoat Basra Police pursued
Ten percent of Basra police are facing punishment over their conduct in recent fighting in the southern city, says Iraq's interior ministry. About 1,600 officers have either been discharged, detained or are wanted for court martial for dereliction of duty, Maj Gen Abdulkarim Khalaf told the BBC.   He said they were being investigated for failure to open fire at outlaws, joining them or giving them weapons. The government's operation in Basra tried to crush powerful militias there. The operation, which involved Iraqi troops and was personally instigated by the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, began about two weeks ago and saw fierce fighting.   It ended with an Iranian-brokered deal that saw the militias off the streets but retain their weapons. The police facing punishment have links with the main militia group, the Mehdi Army, which is loyal to the radical Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr, say local sources. Maj Gen Khalif said the alleged renegades are being charged under Article 20 of the Security Law - violation of which, he said, carries a maximum penalty of death.   http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/7336386.stm


How are we supposed to deal with this mess? What’s the point in having a police force if they don’t obey the superior’s orders? It has been clear for several years now that there is a massive portion of policemen that are active members of one Militia or other but nothing has been done about it. As long as Maliki’s government continues to turn a blind eye to the corruption the sooner the Iraqi army and police will be too few and too poorly armed to replace American and British forces fighting anti-government insurgents.   It’s no secret that the Iraqi army and police forces are full of "ghost battalions" which are inflated so that corrupt officers pocket the pay of soldiers who never existed or have gone home. All in all the Americans claim that there are 450,000 police and army is ludicrous given that such a high percentage of those serving are loyal to gangs and militias. Of course the corruption goes much higher than this. The various governments since 2003 have spent billions on the ministry of defence and ministry of the interior but what do we have to show for it?   I remember reading about one particular case where more than $300m was spent on buying 24 military helicopters and other equipment from Poland. When the helicopters were received and examined they were found to be over 28 years old. What’s more the original manufacturer had recommended that they be scrapped after 25 years. This is a drop in the ocean. There have been many other documented cases where the figures are much higher. Much of the blame has to be put on Saddam and the Baathists who started the ball rolling in 1991 when they kept the wages and benefits offered to public servants to a minimum. By this I mean a policeman or teacher’s wages remained at 8000 dinars per year right up till the 2003 invasion. No attempt was made by the Baathists to take into account the massive increase in inflation and the obvious mounting living costs due to sanctions and the rise of the black market. This forced public servants to supplement their wages using whatever means necessary. The traffic police for example used to stop drivers and penalise them for no apparent reason. The driver was then offered a quick get out fine for a “cash payment” rather than be taken to the police station. Teachers would more often than not accept “cash payments” to raise student’s grades in order for them to be accepted by Universities. Passports and other identity papers would not be processed unless the applicant paid an undisclosed “cash payment”, etc, etc. So this type of corruption is nothing new for Iraqis. After 2003 things changed only in as far as public servants went from using corrupt methods to supplement their livelihoods to using bribery and fraud to get rich quick.   Unless our “government” makes a consorted effort to weed out the gangsters and militia men from our forces then we have no chance of getting our country back. So enough talk about taking a gently, gently approach and start getting tough with all law breakers and corrupt government employees. Let Maliki announce that any person found to be obstructing the course of justice, cooperating with militias or profiteering at the expense of the Iraqi people will face the death penalty for treason. Those who choose to ignore this warning should be executed using a fast track process in order to set an example for the rest. I realise this solution might not appeal to the more sensitive amongst us but enough is enough.




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/9/2008 1:53:29 PM)

i think u r right. in the end this ppl only understand this way. they do not understand peace and love 4 their iraqi brothers & sisters & only want 2 have every thing 4 themselfves. they only understand $$$$$$$$$$. they will kill their brother 4 money. better 2 show them a strong goverment because inside their heart they r cowards.




NeoBabylonian -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/9/2008 6:00:01 PM)

I can't agree any more with you LOB, I can't have said it any better myself - thats true wisdom. Since Saddam's time, the seeds of corruption and greed have been sown into the Iraqi people. Those who don't accept simply starved.
When I went to visit Iraq in 2005, even the manhole covers of the roads and motorway lights have been stolen and sold in the black market to the Emirates for much cheaper than they're worth, as the looters weren't experts in the price of steel etc... Add that to the many dodgy obviously re-sprayed cars that are being sold to everyone, that have been put together from scrap and resprayed, like the Chevrolette Caprices with hilariously over-sized truck rear-axels. Any Iraqi who knows nothing about cars from the sanctions would think they are brand new and buy them for the full price. The electricity generator Cartels promise 14 hours of electricity a day, but only supply 2, and use the remaining gas money on beer. Everyone was angry, but they had the Klashnikovs and grenades.

Anyway, exactly like you said this is all a drop in the ocean. I'm just so pissed we get an idiot, retard, traitor and criminal like Maliki as Prime minister rather than someone intelligent and who understand politics very well like you?




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/11/2008 10:09:59 PM)

Thanks bro. I'm sorry to disappoint you but I'm no more politically astute than the next guy. A while back members of iraq4u decided to hold our own elections and nominate each other for positions in the new Iraqi government. I was happy to discover that my fellow voters agreed that the best post for me would be Minister of Alcoholic beverages. Thats how much I know about politics. [:D]

With all the recent additions it might be fun to repeat the exercise.




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/14/2008 1:04:27 PM)

These traitors who handed weapons to the Militias have just been fired. Now correct me if I'm wrong but in just about every other country in the world traitors who are part bof a country's armed forces would be court martialed and have to serve at least some kind of prison sentence. What do we do......give them the sack so that they can re-join their beloved Mehdi army. Does anyone else see the stupidity in this?

Iraq sacks 1,300 troops over Shiite crackdown
by Salam Faraj 1 hour, 36 minutes ago

BAGHDAD (AFP)
- Iraq has dismissed 1,300 troops for failing in their duties during a crackdown on gunmen in Basra, an official said Sunday, as the government vowed to flush Shiite militias out of their Baghdad bastion. The sackings come after hundreds of Iraqi troops and police are reported to have either deserted or joined the other side during a government offensive against Shiite militias that began March 25.

"Those people did not do their duties in Basra and Kut," interior ministry spokesman Major General Abdel Karim Khalaf said referring to army offensives in the southern and central cities.

"There were many complaints against them. They were part of these operations but they did not perform the duties they were supposed to," he told AFP by telephone from Basra.

The raids which mainly targeted areas controlled by Mahdi Army militiamen loyal to Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr sparked fighting which spread to Kut, Baghdad and other Shiite areas of Iraq. Some 700 people were killed in the fighting before Sadr pulled his militiamen off the streets on March 30 in return for an agreement by the government to halt random raids. Battles resumed in renewed fury in Sadr City, a Mahdi Army stronghold, on April 6 when Iraqi and US forces moved tanks and armoured vehicles onto the streets and began taking on militias. Around 90 people have died in Sadr City and other Baghdad Shiite enclaves since then and although there was a lull in the fighting on Sunday, government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said there would be no let-up in security force operations.

"We will continue until we secure Sadr City. We will not come out, we will not give up until the people of Sadr City have a normal life," Dabbagh told AFP.

"(The security forces) will do what they have to do to secure the area. I can't tell you how many days or how many months but they will not come out until they have secured Sadr City."

The township is still under partial curfew and residents reported sporadic gunfire on Sunday, although the heavy battles of the past few days have eased. Dabbagh told a news conference that the security forces were not specifically targeting the Mahdi Army in its nationwide crackdown on militiamen.

"The government doesn't send its forces after any political bloc," he said. "Anyone who is carrying a weapon illegally will be prosecuted. It is not dependent on their political persuasion, whether they be in the Sadrist trend or any other bloc."

But the Sadrists accused the government of using the security forces to weaken the movement ahead of provincial elections due in October.

"This statement (by Dabbagh) shows the government is persisting in carrying out its political agenda before the elections by using the security forces for party political purposes," Sadr spokesman Salah al-Obeidi told AFP in the shrine city of Najaf. US military spokesman Rear Admiral Patrick Driscoll told the joint news conference that those being targeted are "individuals who illegally carry weapons and launch attacks on law-abiding citizens and security forces."

Driscoll said that operations against "illegally armed gangs, extortion groups and other criminals" are continuing in Basra.

"Although there is still much work to be done, Basra is beginning to return to normal life," he said.

US air strikes in east Baghdad, meanwhile, killed two people and set homes ablaze, injuring three civilians and two American soldiers, the US military said on Sunday. Saturday's air strike targeted a group of people planting roadside bombs in the mainly Shiite neighbourhood of New Baghdad, which adjoins Sadr City, a military statement said. One Hellfire missile killed two "criminals" planting a roadside bomb but a second missile "overshot its intended target" and struck a US armoured vehicle, sparking a fire which spread to nearby houses and injured the five. Tensions between the Mahdi Army and the security forces have been further inflamed by the killing of senior Sadr aide Riyad al-Nuri after Friday prayers in the Shiite holy city of Najaf.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080413/wl_afp/iraq




Lion of Babylon -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/14/2008 1:11:59 PM)

Just when I thought things couldn't get any more screwed up here comes our old friend mullah Atari with his latest demands. Ya3ni how much longer do we have to put up with this infantile dick head before our government does the right thing and puts him to sleep for good. When I read these report I just want to put my head down the nearest lav and hurl.

Muqtada al-Sadr demands troops fired for deserting in Basra get jobs back

Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr demanded Monday that the Iraqi government reinstate all security forces fired for deserting during fighting in Basra. The statement was issued by his office in the holy city of Najaf a day after more than 1,300 soldiers and policemen were sacked for abandoning their posts or refusing to fight when clashes broke out during an offensive that began last month in the southern oil hub.

"All the brothers in the army and police who gave up their arms to their bothers (Sadrists), were only obeying their grand religious leaders and they were driven by their religious duties," the anti-U.S. cleric said.

"I call upon all concerned authorities to reconsider their decision to dismiss those people from the army and the police. I demand they be reinstated and even rewarded for their loyalty and devotion to their religion," he added.

The decision to dismiss the security forces came as the Iraqi government has ratcheted up pressure on al-Sadr to disband his Mahdi Army militia or face political isolation.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/...-Statement.php




abujassim -> RE: Handing Basra to the Militias! (4/15/2008 2:46:09 AM)

i find this on rafedain web site.


[image]http://www.alrafedain.net/media/ban/1207672938.jpg[/image]



افلام جديدة عن اعترافات عناصر من ميليشيا جيش المهدي حول الجرائم التي نفذوهاhttp://www.alrafedain.net/index.php?show=news&action=article&id=13319


فلم جديد عن اعترافات احد قياديي جيش المهدي حول جرائم اغتيال نفذها مع مجموعتهhttp://www.alrafedain.net/index.php?show=news&action=article&id=12898

فلم اعترافات قيادي في جيش المهدي حول اغتصاب فتاة بريئة و جرائم اخرىhttp://www.alrafedain.net/index.php?show=news&action=article&id=12681




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