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THE revenge attacks started within minutes of the devastating dawn blast that
wrecked the Golden Mosque in Samarra, one of the holiest Shia shrines in
Iraq.
By the end of the day, as thousands of Iraqis spilt out on to the streets in
protest and more than 90 mosques lay damaged or destroyed, Iraq’s political
and religious leadership was struggling to avert a full-blown civil war. At
least eighteen Sunnis, including three clerics, were reported murdered.
The reprisal attack on al-Quds Sunni mosque in western Baghdad was typical.
Residents ran for cover as more than a dozen masked Shia gunmen raked the
building with bullets. The firing halted as suddenly as it had begun. The
men stepped back into their six saloons and pulled away slowly, singing and
waving jubilant V-signs from the windows. They were ushered from the scene
by soldiers from an Iraqi National Guard checkpoint , who cheered and waved.
Such scenes were repeated across the country as thousands of people, many
calling for revenge, massed in cities throughout the south of Iraq
demonstrating against the desecration of the Golden Mosque.
In the southern city of Basra, Shia militiamen stormed the Maakel prison and
lynched at least eleven Sunni inmates, among them at least two Egyptians.
According to British forces patrolling the city, the gunmen arrived in a
fleet of cars and showed documents which claimed that they were from the
Interior Ministry.
In Baghdad Iraqi troops and police sealed off several districts, Sunni gunmen
set up checkpoints to defend against retaliatory attack and black-clad Shia
militiamen touting rockets and assault rifles took to the streets demanding
revenge. Leaders appealed for calm, but at least four Sunni mosques in the
city were hit by rocket, gun and grenade attacks.
Coming when sectarian tensions were at breaking point, the attack in Samarra,
60 miles north of Baghdad, has succeeded in igniting Shia rage where
thousands of deaths have failed. The golden 9th-century al-Askariya mosque
in the town is the burial site of two imams related to the Prophet Muhammad;
it is one of Iraq’s four holiest sites and sacred to millions of Shias
throughout the world. Shortly before 6.30am yesterday a group of gunmen,
some in uniform, some in black, entered, overpowered guards and planted two
bombs. Just before 7am the top was blown off the dome.
Mouwafak al-Rubaie, Iraq’s National Security Adviser, quickly blamed zealots
linked to the terror cells of al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Sunnah. He said the
bombing, unprecedented in the three-year insurgency, was an effort “to pull
Iraq towards civil war”.
President Talabani of Iraq condemned the assault and appealed for restraint,
saying that it was designed to sabotage negotiations to form a government of
national unity. “We are facing a major conspiracy that is targeting Iraq’s
unity,” he said. “We should all stand hand in hand to prevent the danger of
a civil war.”
In Najaf, Iraq’s most revered Shia cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani,
made a rare television appearance urging protest but forbidding his
followers to attack Sunni mosques. He appealed for seven days of national
mourning, a call that combined with the curdling tension to leave Baghdad’s
streets shuttered and empty by dusk.
But in Baghdad, al-Kut, Najaf, Samarra, Diwaniyah, and al-Hillah the Shia fury
had spilt on to the streets by afternoon.
“There are hundreds of armed people outside my office, they’ve closed the
roads across Sadr city,” Hussein al-Shari’a, a Shia political official, told The
Times. “The situation is critical. The Sadrists here say they have
already attacked a Sunni mosque near by and that at least two of their men
have been killed. Samarra is the straw that broke our bone. The red line has
been crossed.”
Across the bridge from Sadr city sat a tempting target for further Shia
vengeance: Adamiya, a Sunni quarter surrounding the Abu Hanifa mosque. Here,
US troops allowed Sunnis to mount their own armed protection with civilians
carrying guns clearly visible.
In al-Shola, western Baghdad, witnesses said that Shia militiamen fired
grenades at al-Hamza mosque. A teacher said that her students were coralled
by Shia gunmen into armed protest. “They walked into the classrooms, heavily
armed, and said, ‘Why do you sit and study when our imams are attacked? Get
your guns and get out on the streets.’ ”
THE HISTORY
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