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Iraq
Qaeda attack kills 12 in Iraq
2007-12-02
Suspected Al Qaeda militants killed 12 civilians and abducted 35 in an attack on a Shia village north of Baghdad early on Saturday, Reuters quoted police as saying. Ten people were wounded and eight houses burned to the ground in the raid by suspected Sunni Arab gunmen on the village of Duailiyah in the Diyala province. “Al Qaeda militants attacked the village of Duailiyah early this morning, killing 10 people were killed and wounding several others,” AFP quoted police Colonel Hazim Yasin from the nearby city of Baquba as saying. Meanwhile, Iraq’s main Sunni bloc pulled out of parliament on Saturday to protest a crackdown on their leader Adnan Al-Dulaimi, throwing the country’s political process into new turmoil.
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Iraq
Three execution verdicts against AQI killers of Iraqi MP's son
2007-11-25
An Iraqi court has issued "three" death sentences against each of the two murderers denounced with several civilian killings; among their victims was the two sons of MP Mithal Al-Allusi. Al-Allusi told the Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) that the Central Criminal Court "had sentenced each of the two killers of my sons Ayman and Gamal to death three times each." Jurist Tareq Harb, speaking for the victims at court, said the Central Court had sentenced the so-called Jafaar and Ali Mohammad Hafez from the Islamic Army of Iraq group to death three times each, for killing Al-Allusi's sons and a companion. Ten perpetrators remain at large.

Meanwhile, a judiciary source said among the fugitives were Munqiz Adnan Al-Dulaimi, son of MP Adnan Al-Dulaimi, and Minister of Culture Asaad Al-Hashemi. Al-Allusi urged Al-Hashemi to hand himself in to the police, saying Al-Hashemi was not sentenced in absentia.

Ayman and Gamal Al-Allusi, 22 and 30, and their companion, Haider Habib Habib Hussein, were killed in an attack near their house in Baghdad on February 8, 2005.

"This time the Iraqi court did not issue an in absentia sentence against the fugitive minister ... the verdicts were based on clear charges, but the minister escaped among others involved in the crime," Al-Allusi said. He noted that some witnesses had been assassinated so as not to testify in court.

Harb said that during the trial, the killers owned up to committing more than 10 terrorist attacks and "physical liquidation" since February, 2005.
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Iraq
Influential Iraqi Sunni leader accuses government forces of attacking his offices
2007-10-25
(KUNA) -- Iraqi government troops have attacked offices of Adnan Al-Dulaimi's General Council of the People of Iraq in the capital wounding three people, the party said in a statement released on Wednesday.

A force of the Government Guard attacked, late on Tuesday, the offices in Al-Adel district in western Baghdad, wounding two employees and the official spokesman of the General Council, Muhannad Al-Isawi, the statement said.

Al-Dulaimi, leader of the largest Sunni political grouping in the country, condemned in remarks to KUNA the attack and accused government forces of threatening to assassinate him. He also charged that these forces were behind an attempt to kill him when his motorcade was targeted with rockets and machine-gun fire.

Gunmen had assassinated the political advisor of the influential Sunni leader in in western Baghdad. Sheikh Ahmad Khalil Al-Mashhadani was gunned down near the district of Al-Amiriah in the western sector of the city last Thursday, according to a statement released by Al-Dulaimi's party on Monday. The conference is part of the coalition, the Iraqi Concord Front, headed by Al-Dulaimi. The front has 44 out of the 275 parliamentary seats.
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Iraq
Hakim Pays Rare Visit to Anbar in a Major Gesture
2007-10-16
In a major reconciliatory gesture, a leader from Iraq’s largest Shiite party has paid a rare visit to the Sunni Anbar province, delivering a message of unity to tribal sheikhs who have staged a US-backed revolt against Al-Qaeda militants.
Smart move.
The leader of Parliament’s largest Sunni Arab bloc, Adnan Al-Dulaimi, welcomed Ammar Al-Hakim’s visit to Anbar on Sunday as a “good initiative, saying Shiite-Sunni reconciliation was a goal cherished by his once-dominant Sunni Arab minority. “This is what we hope, and we pray to Allah for,” Al-Dulaimi, whose three-party alliance has 44 of parliament’s 275 seats, told The Associated Press yesterday. “We pray to God to make our Shiite brothers ... give us our due rights and not monopolize power.”

Hakim’s visit to Anbar was the latest sign that key Iraqi politicians may be working toward reconciliation independently of Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki’s government, which has faced criticism for doing little to bring together Iraq’s Shiites, Kurds and Sunnis.

Sunni Arab Vice President Tariq Al-Hashemi visited Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani, Iraq’s top Shiite cleric, last month at the holy city of Najaf south of Baghdad. The visit amounted to an unprecedented Sunni Arab endorsement of Sistani’s role as the nation’s guardian.
Another smart move.
Hashemi’s Iraqi Islamic Party also has been distancing itself from militant Sunni Arab groups and has in recent months forged closer ties with Hakim’s Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, the country’s largest Shiite party, and the two major Kurdish parties.
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Iraq
Shiites, Kurds agree to open gov't to Sunnis
2005-12-28
Leaders of the Shiite and Kurdish blocs that emerged triumphant in this month's Iraqi election agreed on Tuesday to push ahead with efforts to bring Sunni and other parties into a grand coalition government. The visit of Abdul Aziz Al Hakim of the Shiite Islamist Alliance to the Kurdish capital Erbil opened a series of planned meetings among rival factions intended to ease friction over election results which Sunni and secular parties say have been rigged and to begin building a consensus administration. “We agreed on the principle of forming a government involving all the parties with a wide popular base,” Kurdish regional leader Masoud Barzani told a joint news conference after talks with Hakim, the dominant force in the alliance. Hakim, whose bloc has run the interim government for the past year in coalition with the Kurds, was due to meet the other main Kurdish leader, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, on Wednesday, launching a series of bilateral meetings that will include Sunni Arab and secular leaders disappointed in the vote.

In Baghdad, several thousand supporters of secular former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi marched in the latest street protest against the results of the December 15 ballot. They want a rerun of a vote that handed close to a majority to the alliance, whose armed supporters they accuse of forming Islamist death squads. Privately, however, many disappointed leaders acknowledge the results will stand and say they will negotiate a coalition. After meeting Hakim, Talabani will see, among others, Allawi, a secular Shiite, and Sunnis Adnan Al Dulaimi and Tariq Al Hashemi of the Accordance Front, Planning Minister Barham Saleh, a senior official in Talabani's party, said.
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Iraq
Iraqis Attempt to Form "National Unity" Govt
2005-12-25
The governing Shiite coalition called on Iraqis yesterday to accept results showing the religious bloc leading in parliamentary elections and moved ahead with efforts to form a “national unity” government. But as they reached out to Sunnis and others, senior officials in the United Iraqi Alliance headed by cleric Abdul-Aziz Al-Hakim deepened the postelection turmoil by claiming that extremists and Saddam loyalists were the ones questioning the results.

“There will be no going back and no new elections,” said senior alliance official Jawad Al-Maliki. “The results must be accepted and the will of the people must be respected.” The alliance said that preliminary results showing them with a clear lead in the Dec. 15 elections were not the result of fraud or intimidation. They charged that many violations took place in Sunni areas, and claimed that many of its “opponents” conspired with insurgents to alter results. “We, the United Iraqi Alliance, were surprised by the results. We were expecting more seats,” Al-Maliki said at a news conference attended by five senior alliance members. “The opponents have made it clear through their statements and warnings that they stand alongside the terrorists.”

He was referring to statements by senior Sunni politicians who openly thanked some insurgent groups for not attacking polling stations, and to reports that masked militants were guarding some of them. Adnan Al-Dulaimi, the head of the main Sunni coalition known as the Iraqi Accordance Front openly thanked “resistance groups” in the days after the elections. “They have stated that what they call ‘resistance’ has protected the ballot boxes in their areas. This is a confession that rigging has happened,” Al-Maliki said.

The harsh comments demonstrated the difficulty that Iraqi parties will face when they sit down to form a government after final results from the elections are released in early January. The officials added that the alliance had begun talks with other groups about the possibility of forming a “national unity” government.
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Iraq
Jaafari urges Sunnis to form national unity coalition
2005-12-18
Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari yesterday urged Sunni Arabs to unite with Shi'ites in Iraq's new parliament following a general election that many hope can help ease ethnic tensions. "To our brothers in Mosul, Ramadi and Tikrit, I say your brothers in Najaf, Karbala and Hilla have waited a long time to work hand in hand with you, under the dome of the next parliament, to build the new Iraq," he announced.

Outgoing premier Jafaari urged Sunni clerics to use their influence "to spread principles of unity and freedom" and reached out to Baathists from Saddam Hussein's former ruling party to help rebuild Iraq.

Leading Sunni politician Adnan Al Dulaimi also called for a parliamentary coalition to promote national unity. "We will work towards finding a strong coalition in the national assembly that can protect the rights of Iraqis," said the politician, a leader of the Iraqi National Concord Front, the largest Sunni group to contest the vote.

Sunnis, who largely boycotted a vote for a transitional parliament in January, flocked to polls on Thursday to elect a full-term parliament and boost their political representation over the next four years.

Dulaimi also thanked insurgents for holding to a promise not to attack polling stations. "The election process succeeded ... Thank God there were only a few cases in a huge country where there is death and violence," Al Dulaimi said at a news conference.

The Iraqi branch of Al Qaeda, meanwhile, urged the country's Sunni Arabs not to be fooled by the apparent success of the elections. "The coming days will show you the fate of this 'democratic marriage' and the marriage of prostitution that it celebrated," the group said in a statement on a frequently used Islamist website. "Their armed forces (of the Iraqi government) will be useless." The authenticity of the statement, however, could not be verified.

The group, led by Jordanian Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, is threatening to continue its attacks in Iraq and says it did not halt them during the polls.

Al Qaeda in Iraq claimed in the Internet statement that it carried out multiple attacks on US and Iraqi forces during the elections. A day before the elections, five militant groups including Al Qaeda in Iraq, issued a statement condemning the elections, but stopped short of threatening to attack polling stations. This was perceived as an attempt to not harm voters from the Sunni Arab community.

It remains unclear whether Jaafari - part of the conservative Shi'ite grouping, the United Iraqi Alliance, which is again likely to win a majority in parliament - will hold on to his post, particularly if Sunnis or secular Shi'ite candidate Iyad Allawi post strong results.
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Iraq
Al Dulaimi puts priority on ending militancy
2005-12-18
Sunni Arab participation in the elections could have been even higher if there had been more polling centres in key Sunni areas, a head of the largest Sunni Arab slate said yesterday. Adnan Al Dulaimi, of the Iraqi Accordance Front, said his group's first task when they enter the parliament will be to work on calming the security situation. He predicted that the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance will not retain the slim majority they hold in the outgoing parliament because his Sunni group, the Kurdish Alliance and former Prime Minister Eyad Allawi's ticket will gain strength. "It makes the heart happy that all Iraqis went out and participated in the elections in large numbers, even in the areas that are referred to as hot. The situation was quiet, there were not any confrontations or riots," Al Dulaimi said in the telephone interview.
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