AP
Smoke rises above campaign posters after a series of bombs that exploded
on April 25, 2014 at a campaign rally for a Shiite group in Baghdad.
A multiple bomb attack that killed at least 33 people at a campaign
rally for a militant Shiite group likely unleashed a series of apparent
sectarian attacks in Iraq, signalling the start of a new wave of
Sunni-Shiite bloodletting ahead of elections next week, security
officials said on Saturday.
An al-Qaeda breakaway group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant,
claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack on the Baghdad rally, which
drew about 10,000 backers of Asaib Ahl al-Haq.
It said on a militant website that the bombings were to avenge what it
called the killing of Sunnis and their forced removal from their homes
by Shiite militias. The authenticity of the claim could not be
independently verified.
A senior Asaib Ahl al-Haq official said the 33 dead included 10 group
members who had fought in the Syrian civil war. Its members fight with
forces loyal to President Bashar Assad, a member of a Shiite sect. The
Islamic State fights with Sunni rebels trying to oust Assad.
Such bomb attacks are not uncommon in Iraq, but targeting a gathering by
a militant Shiite group had been expected to spark retaliation.
Several hours after the Baghdad bombing on Friday, a senior Sunni
politician in the mostly Shiite southern city of Basra was shot dead in
what appeared to be a revenge attack. On Saturday, police found nine
bodies, some bullet-riddled, in several Sunni and Shiite districts of
the Iraqi capital, security officials said. The bodies could not be
immediately identified.
Other bodies have been found in similar attacks reminiscent of the worst
days of Iraq’s sectarian violence between 2006 and 2008. Then, Baghdad
woke up almost daily to news of bodies found shot, decapitated or
drilled.
Also on Saturday, gunmen in a speeding car opened fire on a group of
civilians in the mixed al-Amil neighbourhood of western Baghdad, killing
two people and wounding three. The security officials said the shooting
took place in one of al-Amil’s Sunni sections.
Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures from the attacks.
Last year, the death toll in Iraq climbed to its highest levels since
the violence between 2006 and 2008. The United Nations says 8,868 people
were killed in 2013, and more than 1,400 people were killed in the
first two months of this year alone.
Friday’s rally was held under heavy security, with hundreds of the
group’s militiamen and veterans of the Syria war in charge. The 10 Syria
war veterans killed were among scores of militiamen in green military
fatigues patrolling the rally, said the Asaib Ahl al-Haq official. He
and officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren’t authorized
to speak to journalists
The rally was held to introduce Asaib Ahl al-Haq’s candidates in
Wednesday’s election, but a speech given by the group’s leader, Sheik
Qais al-Khazali, carried heavy sectarian undertones with ominous
threats. It included several references to the civil war in Syria and
the conflict in the mainly Sunni province of Anbar west of Baghdad,
where government forces are fighting Sunni militants in control of parts
of two cities there, including the provincial capital, Ramadi.
“They fight Iraq’s enemies there on the land of Syria,” al-Khazali said, alluding to his fighters in Syria.
Asaib Ahl al-Haq started off as a Shiite militia nearly a decade ago. It
was blamed for several attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq, including a
spectacular kidnapping of U.S. soldiers in the Shiite holy city of
Karbala in 2007. More recently, it has assumed a growing political role
just as the country was experiencing the resurgence of Sunni-Shiite
violence.
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