Middle East News

Sadrists suspend parliament activity after mosque attack (2nd Roundup)

Jun 13, 2007, 14:23 GMT

Remains of the destroyed holy Shiite shrine of Ali al-Hadi and Hassan al-Askarri in Samarra, 110 km north of Baghdad, Iraq, 13 June 2007. Extremists have blown up the minarets of one of the holiest religious sites for Shiite Muslims in the northern Iraqi town of Samarra today. A previous attack on the Golden Mosque of Samarra, which contains the relics of two of Shia\'s most revered imams, in February 2006 unleashed a wave of sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites that has continued until today.  EPA/WAEL AL-SAMARRAIE

Remains of the destroyed holy Shiite shrine of Ali al-Hadi and Hassan al-Askarri in Samarra, 110 km north of Baghdad, Iraq, 13 June 2007. Extremists have blown up the minarets of one of the holiest religious sites for Shiite Muslims in the northern Iraqi town of Samarra today. A previous attack on the Golden Mosque of Samarra, which contains the relics of two of Shia\'s most revered imams, in February 2006 unleashed a wave of sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites that has continued until today. EPA/WAEL AL-SAMARRAIE

Baghdad - The Sadrist parliamentary bloc suspended its parliamentary participation in protest against Wednesday's bombing of the minarets of a sacred Shiite shrine in Samarra, the independent Voices of Iraq news agency reported, citing the bloc's spokesman Nassar al-Rubaie.

'The Sadrist bloc decided to suspend its membership until the two destroyed shrines are rebuilt, along with all other Sunni and Shiite shrines and mosques all over Iraq,' al-Rubaie told Voices of Iraq.

Al-Rubaie said the occupying forces responsible for the attacks and accused them of sowing sedition among Iraqis.

The Sadrist bloc, which is part of the United Iraqi Coalition (UIC), holds 30 seats in the 275-member Iraqi parliament.

Feared extremist Shiite cleric and militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr denounced Wednesday's attacks on the minarets of a sacred Shiite shrine, blaming the Iraqi government and 'foreign occupation' for the damage.

Extremists Wednesday blew up the minarets of one of the holiest religious sites for Shiite Muslims in the northern Iraqi town of Samarra, the second attack on the site.

Police reported that the two thin towers of the Mosque of Imams Hassan al-Askari and Ali al-Hadi had been completely destroyed.

'A Muslim would never dare to do such a thing,' a furious al-Sadr said in a statement to reporters in the revered Shiite city of Najaf, 180 kilometres south of Baghdad.

'(The perpetrators) are the sly hands of (foreign) occupation that want to do us harm,' the statement signed by al-Sadr added, referring to US-led multinational forces stationed in Iraq - a favourite target for Jaish al-Mahdi militias loyal to al-Sadr.

Police reported that before the bombs were detonated, several mortar shells had struck the site which was being guarded by army and Interior Ministry units.

A joint statement by US Ambassador Ryan C Crocker and General David Petraeus, commander of the multinational forces, stationed in Iraq condemned the 'vicious' attack on the minarets and blamed it on the al-Qaeda terrorist network.

'It is an act of desperation by an increasingly beleaguered enemy seeking to obstruct the peaceful political and economic development of a democratic Iraq,' the statement read.

'We share the outrage of the Iraqi people against the crime,' it added.

The Iraqi government imposed a blanket curfew Wednesday in Baghdad following the attack. The curfew will continue until further notice.

An attack on the mosque in February 2006 brought the imposing golden dome - for which the site is also often referred to as the Golden Mosque - crashing to the ground, killing one person and injuring two others.

The 68-metre-tall golden dome was completed in 1905 at the site of the mosque dating back to the 10th Century.

That attack triggered a wave of sectarian violence between Shiites and Sunnis in Iraq which since then has claimed an estimated 15,000 lives and the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of others from their homes.

Shiite clerics had accused the government after the first attack of taking too long to repair the golden dome on top of the mosque, an accusation repeated by al-Sadr in his Wednesday statement.

Al-Sadr said that the government was also to blame because it did not either protect or restructure the two shrines.

Top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani condemned the attack and urged people not to follow the path of sectarianism, his office said.

The Chairman of the religions foundation of Sunnis in Samarra Sheik Ahmed-al-Samarai condemned the attack and urged Iraqis not to get drawn into conflicts between religious groups.

The Golden Mosque contains relics of the imams Hassan al-Askari and of Ali al-Hadi who lived in the 9th century and who are regarded by Shiites as the 10th and 11th imams after the Prophet Mohamed.

© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur


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foreignersJun 13th, 2007 - 17:21:09

Muqtada is right in blaming 'foreign occupation'. Foreigners to blame are Yemenis, Syrians, Saudis, Chechens, Pakistanis, Egyptians, etc.

Some Iraqi tribes, seeing this problem, are now trying to drive them out.

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The colonists and their schemesJun 13th, 2007 - 17:31:05

The occupation forces had been trying to ignite sectarianism, but failed. Last year they succeded however, by attacking this very shrine.

TIMES ON LINE HAS VERY PROFESSIONAL; AND ACCURATELY SAID, ''IT HELPED TO IGNITE THE FIRE...'' AS THEY WERE TRYING TO MAKE IT LOOK SECTARIAN, BUT HAD FAILED AND THIS INCIDENT LAST YEAR HELPED THEM.

Occupation forces are the main trouble in Iraq and they must get out of there. They have disarmed the Shiites and now they are arming the sunnie minority. So that Iran will have no influence over Iraq. They do not seem to understand the power of Almighty God, as they themselves believe in ignorant, ill-knowledged god as depicted by old testament...

''New International Version (NIV)
Genesis 1
The Beginning
1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.
2 Now the earth was [a] formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.

3 And God said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light. 4 God saw that the light was good, and He separated the light from the darkness. 5 God called the light 'day,' and the darkness he called 'night.' And there was evening, and there was morning—the first day.''

SUCH AN IGNORANT GOD, IS HE REALLY GOD OR MAN MADE THING?

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to 'colonists and their schemes'Jun 13th, 2007 - 17:45:53

Let me guess: you're god is better than their god, right?

That you suffer from such delusions, strongly colors the rest of your posting.

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porkyJun 13th, 2007 - 18:45:43

Personally I am a fan of Charles Darwin and others to explain why we are here and if this God is so powerful that he can create the heavens and the Earth and all creatures upon it why are a few alternative believers giving him so much trouble?

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pbJun 13th, 2007 - 22:03:06

Please, let's not drag a 'higher power' into this one more time - that's been the problem for 1300 years - a divided view of God, and resulting intolerance.

This is a political/terrorism issue, and as we've seen, force only begets more force in retaliation. We're not going to 'preach' our way out of this, or 'convert' anyone to put an end to it.

Bush's poor strategies led to the current mess in Iraq, at a time he shoulod have been focused on cleaning up al Qaeda in Afghanistan. This is similar to medical malpractice - a surgeon who attempts to excise a cancerous tumor, and ends up proliferating cancer cells throughout the patient's bloodstream.

I think, at this point, we have minimal (if any) chance of turning Iraq into something resembling a governed society, and the problem is containment - keeping the violence from spreading to other countries.

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Religious intolerance............Jun 14th, 2007 - 10:14:48

I thought that this was a new form of Islam.

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What a bankrupt peope Muslims are:Jun 14th, 2007 - 10:18:43

When they do something so horrible they then blame their enemies. They NEVER do anything bad because the koran says not to???
Look at ANY conflict in the world today and chances are there is a muslim group fighting someone...EVEN each other....
World peace.....I do not think SOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
World War is more likely.

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