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War on Iraq

Who Are Iraq's 'Outlaws'?

Azzaman. Posted April 9, 2008.


Sadr's militia refuses to disarm; issue further dividing Parliament.
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Who are Iraq's Outlaws?
By Fatih Abdulsalam

Five years after the fall of Baghdad, Iraq has turned into a country of outlaws.

And the government, which itself is a bunch of outlaws, has recently embarked on massive military campaigns to strike "the outlaws" and their groups which it blames for the upsurge in insecurity.

But one basic condition for these military operations sponsored and aided by U.S. occupation troops must be justice and equity in dealing with the groups that have turned into umbrellas for the protection of the outlaws.

To single out one particular group and blame it for the lawlessness and violence is unfair.

The outlaws in Iraq are not all members of the Sadr movement and his Mahdi Army despite the fact that Sadr's outlaws have hitherto been almost free to act under the nose and eyes of the government and the U.S. occupiers.

The outlaw could be a cabinet minister who must be dismissed and brought to justice for corruption.

The outlaw could be anyone using religion as a means to implement their plans of hell that have terrorized the whole nation.

The outlaw could be a member of parliament in Baghdad, using his authority for personal, tribal or factional gains.

The outlaws are not only the militiamen of Mahdi Army.

They could be senior officials in the government, or leaders with sectarian inclinations and policies.

The outlaws may include police chiefs who act in complicity with the murderous militias.

The outlaws are those consultants in ministries whose advice is given and sought to achieve personal, tribal and factional gains.

The outlaws are those who take the constitution into their own hands, emphasizing only the paragraphs they see as useful to advance their sectarian and ethnic schemes while overlooking the paragraphs restraining their wild behavior and holding them accountable for their actions.

It is so difficult to determine who the outlaw in Iraq is because in only five years the U.S. occupiers have turned the whole country into a land where only outlaws can survive.

*****

Sadr's Mahdi Army Refuses to Disarm
By Abdulhussein al-Gharafi

A senior official of the movement led by the Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has said that the group's military wing, the Mahdi Army, will not lay down arms as demanded by the government.

"The Sadr movement expresses reservations at the decision of this council on disarming the Mahdi Army. This council's decisions are not binding," said Liwa Sumaisem, head the group's political commission.

The Political Council for National Security announced in a meeting on Sunday that the Sadr and his movement will not be allowed to take part in the elections unless the Mahdi Army is disbanded first.

The meeting was attended by President Jalal Talabani and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.


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View:
Who Are Iraq's 'Outlaws'?
Posted by: Quannah on Apr 9, 2008 7:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who Are Iraq's 'Outlaws'?

Why, it's the USA!

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Who Are Iraq's 'Outlaws'? Posted by: oceanwaves99999