Police Raid Mehdi Army Strongholds in Kut

Author: 
Mohammed Abbas, Reuters
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2008-03-13 03:00

BAGHDAD, 13 March 2008 — Iraqi police raided strongholds of Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr’s Mehdi Army in the southern city of Kut yesterday after the militia broke a cease-fire and clashed with security forces a day earlier.

The city’s police chief said at least 11 people were killed in Tuesday’s gunbattles in which US Special Forces called in airstrikes after Iraqi authorities asked them for help.

With US forces already stretched by an upsurge in violence in Iraq since January, such cease-fire violations are a worrying development. US commanders have credited the cease-fire with sharply reducing sectarian bloodshed that threatened civil war.

But the commanders say security gains can only be cemented by progress toward national reconciliation. Last month, Parliament passed an amnesty law hailed by Washington as a major step toward healing rifts between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.

The law is seen as benefiting many Sunni Arabs held as security detainees. Giving the first figures, President Jalal Talabani’s office said 1,293 prisoners had been released so far. Iraqi jails hold about 23,000 prisoners.

A day after saying he would quit, the top US commander for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Adm. William Fallon, visited Baghdad. Fallon resigned after a magazine reported he was pushing President George W. Bush to avoid war with Iran.

“He was in Baghdad this morning. As far as we know it was just a regular visit to Baghdad,” said US military spokesman Navy Lt. Michael Street.

In Kut, police officer Lt. Col. Sudad Jamil said police had regained control of four districts where the Mehdi Army had a strong presence and were going house-to-house hunting for gunmen who had taken part in Tuesday’s fighting.

The largest neighborhood in Kut, Al-Jihad, had been sealed off by Iraqi security forces, he said. Residents inside Jihad said Mehdi Army gunmen were everywhere and there were rumors that roadside bombs had been planted in street entrances.

Districts ‘Purged’

“We have purged four neighborhoods and arrested a group of Mehdi Army gunmen, including a senior leader,” said another police officer, Lt. Aziz Al-Amara, who commands a rapid reaction unit.

However, Kut police chief Maj. Gen. Abdul Hanin Al-Amara said at a news conference that those detained had told police they belonged to a religious movement, suggesting they were not linked to Sadr. He gave no further details.

The director of Sadr’s office in Kut, Abu Sadek, insisted the gunmen were “outlaws” with no links to the cleric.

Sadr renewed a six-month cease-fire last month but at the weekend issued a statement telling followers they could defend themselves if attacked. Until Tuesday’s fighting, there had been no major violations of the truce.

There were differing accounts of what triggered the clashes. Iraqi police said it started after US and Iraqi forces were dispatched to find a mortar team who had attacked a US military base in the area on Monday night.

The US military said in a statement late on Tuesday that US Special Forces had come to the aid of an Iraqi security patrol and had been attacked by a large number of “suspected criminal militia fighters.”

A health official in Kut, who declined to be named, put the final death toll from Tuesday’s clashes at 13, including two policemen, three children and one woman. Police chief Amara said 11 people were killed and 26 wounded, including five policemen. The reason for the discrepancy was not immediately clear.

The clashes in Kut were the latest in an upsurge in violence across Iraq, including a number of suicide bombings which the US military has blamed on Al-Qaeda. The military has acknowledged the spike but says it does not represent a trend.

“Even though violence is dramatically reduced from 2006 and 2007 this has unquestionably been a tough few days,” US military spokesman Maj. Gen. Kevin Bergner told a news conference in Baghdad.

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