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StephanieVanbryce

05/06/05 12:05 AM

#3508 RE: otraque #3507

Iraqi commando battalion pulled out of Samarra
US officers say battalion of Iraq's elite commando troops withdrawn from Samarra for looting, torching houses.

By Ned Parker - SAMARRA, Iraq

A battalion of Iraq's elite commando troops was pulled out of the rebel bastion of Samarra last month after repeated incidents of looting, culminating in the torching of a home, several US officers said Thursday.

The battalion, headed by a colonel named Jalil, was widely perceived as running amok, officers said.


US soldiers regularly referred to the commandos as "thieves" and said there were several incidents where Jalil's men looted homes.


In an incident in the second week of March that sealed the unit's fate, the commandos searched a home near Samarra, found no incriminating evidence and then set it on fire, officers said on condition of anonymity.


US officers and soldiers preferred their names not be disclosed due to their working relationship with the interior ministry and the awkward position of criticising the commandos, considered the vanguard of Iraq's security forces.


The battalion has since been replaced by what US officers describe as a far more disciplined batch of soldiers who are on model behaviour. There are now two commando battalions in Samarra.


One US soldier who witnessed the March incident gave the following account.


"The ministry of interior (MOI) decided they wanted to hit a few more target houses and the special forces (SF) said 'OK' and we followed along. We were pulling outer security a house or two down and couldn't see the MOI or SF," he said.


"All of a sudden we started seeing smoke billowing up and then SF came over the radio saying that the MOI colonel with us had given his 'commandos' the order to loot the house and then set it on fire," the soldier added.


"The SF tried to stop them once they realized what was going on but short of opening fire on them, which I would have preferred to see, we could do nothing to truly stop them. We finally drove off back to Samarra, with the life of some farming family who wasn't home going up in flames.


"The SF and all of us were royally pissed and they immediately severed ties with them cancelling some upcoming missions. We did the same," he explained.


In another jab at the interior ministry, several US soldiers and officers also questioned its account of a March 22 raid on an insurgent training camp on Lake TharThar that the ministry said left more than 80 dead.


The soldiers and officers who visited the training camp said they saw no trace of any bodies at the site, which some of them entered alongside and others shortly after the commandos.


The commandos are a controversial 12,000-strong unit of fighters, many of them from Saddam Hussein's special forces, security directorate and republican guard.


They are a mix of Shiites and Sunnis, with the country's Shiite majority probably edging out the Sunnis, and a small proportion of Kurds.


The commandos have been dogged by torture allegations and at least one of their detainees in Samarra turned up dead last month.


The creator of the commandos is Major General Adnan Thabet, 63, a former Sunni Muslim intelligence officer from Samarra who was expelled from the army in 1984, and jailed at Abu Ghraib for conspiracy against Saddam Hussein in 1996.


Thabet received a death sentence later commuted to 20 years in jail. He was released in October 2002 as part of a broad amnesty Saddam issued at the time.


He has two deputy commanders, one of them Shiite and the other Sunni.


Shiite General Rashid Flaih, a brigade commander, has been a lightning rod for criticism.


In October, Iraq's de-Baathification committee protested Flaih's appointment to the interior ministry, citing his job as security chief in the southern city of Nassiriyah in 1991 after the suppression of that year's Shiite uprising.


Flaih offers up his own jail time from 1996 to 2001 as proof of his integrity. He was in hiding in southern Iraq around the shrine city of Karbala until Saddam's fall in 2003. He met Thabet during his incarceration at Abu Ghraib prison.


Both Thabet and Flaih acknowledged the commandos' rough tactics, but said they stopped short of torture.


"When they find a suspect, they start beating him, it's normal. He's a criminal. He is beheading and butchering people," Flaih told AFP in a recent interview.

http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/iraq/?id=13427


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Amaunet

05/07/05 9:54 AM

#3527 RE: otraque #3507

14 Sunnis Arabs shot dead
From correspondents in Baghdad
07may05
FOURTEEN Iraqis shot dead and left at a Baghdad garbage dump were Sunni Arabs, relatives say, raising the spectre of deeper sectarian strife in Iraq following mass killings of Shi'ites.

Relatives of the victims, witnesses and a police official said the dead were farmers from the town of Madaen just south of Baghdad, where tit-for-tat kidnappings and killings between Shi'ites and Sunnis have sparked tension across Iraq.

A resident who saw a man digging a grave in an industrial area of Baghdad alerted police to the corpses early yesterday. Some were blindfolded and shot through the head execution-style.

Officials say it is unclear who killed the Iraqis, but they say insurgents are trying to spark civil war.

Sunni Arab leaders denounced the killings.

"We want the Shi'ite religious establishment to condemn this horrific act just like the Sunni religious establishment condemns the killing of innocent civilians," said Dhia al-Hadithi, spokesman for the Sunni Endowment group.

While there have been repeated mass killings in Iraq of Shi'ites and Kurds – their bodies often dumped in public to intimidate others – there have been few reports of massacres of Sunni Arabs.

The discovery of the Sunni Arab corpses in northern Baghdad suggests sectarian violence may be spiralling.

The influential Muslim Clerics Association, which has a wide following among Sunnis, published the names of the 14 victims, all from one of Iraq's most powerful tribes. Some were brothers.

Elections have dramatically changed Iraq's political landscape. Sunni Arabs who dominated under Saddam Hussein have been sidelined and Shi'ites and Kurds oppressed by the toppled leader's regime are the new powers in Iraq.

Iraq's leaders have bickered for three months since the Jan. 30 polls, struggling to balance the interests of Shi'ites, Sunni Arabs and Kurds in the new government and to defuse sectarian tensions. Tensions have spread in areas such as Madaen, a mixed town where Sunni insurgents are reported to have kidnapped up to 60 Shi'ites last month.



http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,15215072%255E1702,00.html