|
Lion of Babylon -> RE: Wife swapping Mehdi Army (7/6/2007 2:59:10 AM)
|
Jihoosh are up to their old tricks. Mahdi Army, Security Forces Clash in Samawa Three Dead as Sadrists, Authorities Trade Allegations; City under Curfew Clashes broke out early Thursday between members of the Mahdi Army and Iraqi security forces in the southern city of Samawa. "The casualties of the clashes rose up to three dead, including a policeman, and nine wounded, including three policemen and a woman," a medical source from Samawa hospital told the independent news agency Voices of Iraq (VOI). Earlier on Thursday, eyewitnesses told VOI "the clashes broke out at 4:00 am on Thursday between armed elements the Mahdi Army and Iraqi security forces." "The battles concentrated in the southern part of the city, during which machine guns and Rocket Propelled Grenades (RPG) were used," a local source told VOI. The clashes erupted after Mahdi Army fighters took to the streets on Wednesday following reports that a security patrol had escorted the motorcade of the chief of the Sadrist office in Samawa, Ali al-Khirsan while on way home from the nearby al-Rumithah town in Muthana province. The fighting lasted until Thursday afternoon, VOI reports in Arabic. Apparently, Sadr loyalists feared a plan to arrest al-Khirsan after he exchanged accusations with the Muthanna governor, Muhammad Ali al-Hasani, over security violations in the province. These accusations began on Tuesday when the governor of al-Muthanna accused elements from the Mahdi Army of violating security in the city, leading al-Khirsan to fire back at him and his security apparatus, VOI reports. Meanwhile, local sources said that efforts are being made to contain the crisis that started with the clashes between Mahdi army fighters and security forces in Samawa, the agency writes. Sporadic clashes continue in the city, Col. Kadhim al-Jayashi, director of the Muthanna police told VOI, according to an Arabic-language report by the agency, saying that fighting was heard in the center and south of Samawa involving automatic rifles. The colonel also said that a curfew was in effect throughout the city. Clashes continue, differences remain In a separate report in Arabic, VOI/Aswat al-Iraq reported that the local administration and the Mahdi Army leadership continue to differ over the causes of the fighting. Col. al-Jayashi told VOI that the clashes broke out after “the authorities tried to spread order and prohibit the armed presence that spread through the city on Wednesday evening.” Col. Jayashi said that “joint forces of the police and (Iraqi) Army stormed areas where militants had deployed, approaching from the al-Jumhouri area south of the city center, where these security forces were able to clear some of the areas after clashes with armed groups, and then withdrew.” Eyewitnesses told al-Malaf Press that the police have closed off the principal streets in the city. Jayashi also said that parties, which he did not mention by name, were involved in negotiations to find a solution to the crisis, but inferred that these negotiations were not producing results. Sadrist response On the other hand, a Sadrist organization official told VOI that the clashes broke out after security forces raided Sadrist offices in Samawa. “The clashes broke out after forces of the Muthanna governor undertook an operation to storm the Sadr office at 4 a.m. on Thursday, supported by security forces,” Husayn al-Hadhifi, communications director at the Samawa Sadrist office said, according to VOI’s report in Arabic. Muhammad Ali al-Hasani, Muthanna province’s governor, is affiliated with the SIIC. The SIIC and the Sadrist current are bitter political rivals in the Iraqi Shi'a community, and clashes have erupted in recent months between gunmen loyal to the two forces in other Shi'a areas of the country. Al-Hadhifi said that the attempt to storm the Sadr offices was foiled by the office’s guards, but was followed by two operations by Iraqi security forces to try to sieze control of areas controlled by the Mahdi Army. The Mahdi Army announced Thursday morning that it “will not initiate attacks (but) will maintain its defensive position,” al-Hadhifi said, also telling VOI that the Sadrist office had sent “a delegation to negotiate with the Muthanna governor, but that the governor refused to negotiate.” Local religious leaders, political leaders, and dignitaries were involved in efforts to defuse the crisis, VOI reported in Arabic, citing local sources. Mortar Rounds In what VOI reports as a separate incident, a security source said "four mortar shells fell onto the (Muthanna) governate compound and caused no human casualties." The Muthanna provincial administration is headquartered in Samawa. The same security source told the news agency that a mortar fell onto Muthanna Police Department, wounding two policemen. Mortars also struck the headquarters of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, or SIIC. Eyewitnesses said that weapons used by both sides in the fighting included automatic weapons and RPGs, and that the fighting was centered in the southern suburbs of Samawa city, including al-Jumhouri, al-Haydariya, and Muhafaza Street -- where the Sadrist office is located -- as well as al-'Amil district, al-Shurta, also reporting that the areas Samawa, on the Euphrates River, is located 175 miles south of Baghdad.
|
|
|
|