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Iraqi Shi'ites Blame Sunni Extremists for Fanning Sectarian Violence
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Sectarian-motivated violence turns once peaceful, mixed-religious
communities of Baghdad into war zone





Brother of Hussein al-Tarash cries over coffins containing some of the
nine members of his brother's family at the start of a funeral
processionShi'ite Muslim leaders in Iraq say they fear that the threat
of a civil war, pitting the country's largest Muslim group against
minority Sunni Arabs, has escalated to dangerous levels. Their
comments follow months of violence against both Shi'ites and Sunnis,
including mass executions, kidnappings and assassinations.

The cleric at the tiny al-Rasul Shi'ite mosque in Doura is no stranger
to violence against Shi'ite Muslims.

Mohammed Hassan al-Asadi's eyes narrow bitterly behind his
silver-framed glasses, recalling the suffering the country's majority
Shi'ites endured for more than 30 years under former dictator Saddam
Hussein.

Millions of Shi'ites were stripped of their rights and left to
languish in abject poverty. When they rebelled, the Sunni Arab leader
ordered the destruction of Shi'ite villages, and in some cases, had
their residents killed. Shi'ites say much of the persecution was for
no other reason than they were non-Arab with long-standing religious
differences with Sunni Muslims.

But the 50-year-old cleric says nothing prepared him for what happened
in his mosque one day early last month, when four armed gunmen burst
in and opened fire at several dozen fleeing worshippers. Two men were
killed. Several others were critically wounded.

Mr. Asadi says the top spiritual leader of the Iraqi Shi'ites, Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, is always reminding his followers that there
is no difference between Shi'ites and Sunnis. "If that's so, how can
one Muslim do this to another?" the cleric asks.

Tension between the two religious communities has escalated
dramatically since elections in January, which were boycotted by most
of Iraq's five million Sunni Arabs. The landmark vote empowered
majority Shi'ites for the first time in the country's history and the
new government, made up mostly of anti-Saddam Shi'ites and Kurds,
greatly increased Sunni fears of being marginalized.

The Sunni Arab-led insurgency in Iraq, which had previously focused
most of its fury on American troops, foreigners, and Iraqis working
with the U.S. coalition, began a parallel campaign of intimidation and
violence against ordinary Shi'ite Muslims.

Now, hardly a day goes by in Iraq without bodies of Shi'ites being
discovered somewhere. The dead are found floating in the Tigris River.
Some are dumped in ditches or alongside highways. Most of the victims
are young Shi'ite men, but women and children have also been killed.

One of the most horrific killings occurred on Sunday in a mainly
Shi'ite district of Baladiyat in eastern Baghdad. A gunman pumped
lethal rounds, one each, into the heads of a woman and her seven young
children while they slept in their home. Family members and friends of
the woman blamed Sunnis for the attack.

Shi'ite religious leaders have not been spared either. In mid-May,
gunmen killed Sheikh Qassim Gharawi, a top aid to spiritual leader
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, in a drive-by shooting.

Sheikh Gharawi is one of several aides to Mr. Sistani who have been
killed or wounded in insurgent attacks in recent months. Officials of
the Shi'ite religious political party, the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq, have also been targets of assassinations.

In Doura, 27-year-old Rana Basil sways to Arabic pop music while
cooking a modest lunch of rice and vegetables for herself, her two
children, and five other family members. On a wall near the kitchen, a
large picture of the Imam Ali, the revered prophet of Shi'ite Muslims,
hangs as a reminder of her family's religious roots.

Ms. Basil apologizes for the meager food and explains that she has not
been able to go grocery shopping. She says these days, all Shi'ites in
Doura risk being kidnapped and killed if they step outside their
homes.

"I'm not as scared for myself as I am for my children. These Sunni
thugs will kill us just because we're Shi'ites," Ms. Basil laments.
She says many of her neighbors received death threats and have moved
to predominately Shi'ite neighborhoods, believing that the violence
against them will only get worse here.

Although many more Shi'ites have been killed than Sunnis, ordinary
Sunni Arabs say they, too, are increasingly becoming victims of
sectarian violence.

In another part of Doura, Yasser Abdul Hamid al-Jabouri watches the
traffic from his small shop, where he sells an assortment of bathroom
pipes and other fixtures.

The 42-year-old Sunni Arab says he is constantly on the lookout for
the Shi'ite Badr Brigade, the militia whose presence in Doura, he
says, can only mean bad news for Sunni Arabs.

The shopkeeper says there have been many brutal kidnappings and
killing of Sunnis in Doura and elsewhere in Iraq. Mr. Jabouri says he
believes some have been ordered by officials of the Shi'ite Supreme
Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq and carried out by the group's
Badr Brigade militia.

Mr. Jabouri is not the only Sunni who believes the Badr Brigade is
responsible for killings. In May, a leading Sunni cleric in Baghdad
sharply raised tensions between Sunnis and Shi'ites after he publicly
accused the Badr militia of killing at least four Sunni clerics.



The Badr Brigade was formed by Iraqi Shi'ites in Iran in the 1980's to
oppose Saddam Hussein. It exists entirely separate from the Iraqi Army
and police and despite Badr assurances that the group has largely
disbanded, it is still viewed with deep suspicion among most Sunni
Arabs as being a hit squad for Iraq's Shi'ite-dominated government.

Both moderate Sunnis and Shi'ites acknowledge that existing tension is
also being exploited by Sunni Islamic fundamentalists, who have openly
declared their aim to foment a broader conflict.

Having been driven from their stronghold in Fallujah, last year, by
American forces, Sunni radicals have pushed into areas around Baghdad,
where they have established bases in neighborhoods like Doura and
often speak on behalf of Sunni residents.

A Shi'ite member of the Iraqi National Assembly, Ali al-Dabbagh, says
most Shi'ites understand that not all Sunnis are against them. But he
says Sunni Arabs have failed to make that message clear to the Shi'ite
people.

"The sectarian tension is definitely destroying the country," he said.
"We feel it is the responsibility of the Sunnis and the Sunni clerics
and Sunni politicians that they should raise their voices.

"One of the reasons they can't condemn these acts is that they feel
afraid from these terrorists," continued Ali al-Dabbagh. "But they
have to declare that this is against the interest of the Iraqis and
the interest of Sunnis."

A spokesman for the Sunni political group, National Dialogue Council,
says most Sunnis do want to live in peace with Shi'ites and reject the
radical views of Sunni fundamentalists. But the spokesman, Saleh
Mutlak, also warns that if Sunnis continue to believe that they are
being targeted unfairly, ordinary Sunnis may begin agreeing with
extremists, who want to start a civil war.

"If there is support, it's because of the reaction of the killings
from the government, the detainees' bad treatment, and the bias
attitude of the United States against the Sunnis," he said.
"Otherwise, everybody is against it."

Angry Shi'ite tribal sheikhs, meanwhile, have reportedly been asking
Grand Ayatollah Sistani to issue an edict, permitting them to go after
Sunnis who kill Shi'ites.

The spiritual leader, whose word is law for many Shi'ites, has refused
to grant such a request. But Shi'ite patience is clearly wearing thin.

At the al-Rasul mosque in Doura, Sheikh Asadi grips an old AK-47
assault rifle he has bought to protect his mosque. He says he now
carries it wherever he goes.

The cleric says he sometimes see graffiti on the walls in Doura that
says, "There is but only one God and the Shi'ite people are our
enemy." "To me, that means they choose to be our enemy," Mr. Asadi
says. "We don't choose to be theirs but they are clearly provoking
us."