Iraq | |
Disputes stall Iraqs 2008 budget in parliament | |
2008-01-23 | |
BAGHDAD - Iraqi lawmakers have refused to ratify the nations 2008 budget, the expected passage of which had been praised by Washington as a sign of progress, because of disputes over Parliamentary speaker Mahmoud Mashhadani called the heads of Iraqs main political blocs to a meeting in his office late on Monday after they failed to sign off on the $48 billion budget, and urged them to pass it when parliament next sits on Thursday. The speaker urged all members and heads of blocs who have reservations on the 2008 budget...to hurry and approve the budget in order to provide for the fundamental needs of the Iraqi people, Mashhadanis office said in a statement issued on Tuesday. Mashhadani and Finance Minister Bayan Jabor met the leaders of the major blocs late on Monday to explain the governments position, Mashhadanis office said. US officials in Baghdad have praised the budget and this months passage of a law allowing former members of Saddam Husseins Baath party to rejoin the government and military as evidence of progress. Lawmakers were also being urged to sign off on the increased budget to stimulate Iraqs economy and take advantage of significant security improvements, with attacks across the country down by 60 percent since last June. But what had looked like a smooth passage of the budget disintegrated late on Monday amid continued disagreement between Shia , Sunni Arab and Kurdish lawmakers. One key dispute was the 17 percent of the budget allocated to the largely autonomous northern region of Kurdistan, based on population estimates, with additional funds set aside to pay for Kurdistans peshmerga security forces. The Kurdistan issue has been simmering for months, with arguments over whether the allocation accurately reflected the Kurdish population. In the absence of an accurate census, other lawmakers have argued that Kurdistan should only receive 12 percent of the budget. Several MPs also said Kurdistan should pay for the peshmergas itself. Nassar Al Rubaie, head of a bloc loyal to Shia cleric Moqtada Al Sadr which walked out of the government last year, also voiced concern about what he said were inadequate allocations for teachers and concerns over food rationing. A representative of Shia Fadhila bloc said his group would not agree to the current form of the budget because of what he described as unjustifiable allocations.
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Iraq |
Iraq oil industry reels from abductions of top officials |
2007-08-27 |
![]() Yet the surprisingly resilient oil business in Iraq, home to the worlds third biggest oil reserves, is now tottering as many of the countrys respected veteran oil officials are kidnapped, murdered or seek sanctuary beyond its borders. Nearly two-thirds of Iraqs top 100 managers, including geologists and engineers, in Iraqs oil ministry and its affiliate companies have been murdered or left their jobs since the fall of Saddam Hussains regime in 2003, according to current and former Iraqi oil officials. Thamer al-Ghadhban, oil adviser to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and a former oil minister, says the oil ministry hasnt been able to fill any of these top positions because of the lack of qualified staff. The abduction last week of five top Iraqi oil officials, including the deputy oil minister, underscores the dangers and violence undermining state oil operations and, in turn, government oil revenues and finances. Iraqi Finance Minister Bayan Jabor said a week ago that he expected the government to log a $4bn deficit this year, in good measure because of attacks on oil facilities and staff that have hurt oil output and exports. Ghadhban told Dow Jones Newswires the abduction last week of Deputy Oil Minister Abdul Jabar al-Wagaa, one of the highest ranking oil officials to go missing since the fall of Saddam, is a serious blow to the countrys oil sector. Wagaa, appointed in 2004 as a top assistant to Iraqs oil minister, may have fallen victim to sectarianism. He was one of the highest ranking Sunnis from a prominent tribe, the Jibouri in an oil ministry that some analysts believe is being increasingly staffed with Shia. Definitely Wagaas kidnapping would have very bad consequences on the countrys crude oil production and exports, Ghadhban said. The incident would also have bad effects on the psychology of other oil staff. Wagaa and four officials from the State Oil Marketing Organisation (SOMO), were abducted last Tuesday from their closely guarded residential complex in East Baghdad by unknown gunmen in military-style uniforms and vehicles. SOMO is crucial to Iraqs oil earnings because it markets and sells the majority of its output to the global energy markets. Three of the four high-ranking SOMO officials abducted had responsibilities that included managing crude sales and exports to Europe. SOMO has just a handful of English-speaking executives remaining, versus dozens in 2003, because of staff departures and personnel who have been murdered, government officials say. It is a large campaign by terrorists to rid the country of its highly talented oil know-how, whether through kidnapping, killing or even forcing them to flee the country, former Oil Minister Issam al-Chalabi said. The oil ministry estimates that nearly 300 Iraqi oil workers were killed last year because of militant attacks. Wagaa was in charge of the oil ministrys exploration operations and oversaw the North and South Oil Companies, the state firms in charge of virtually all Iraqs oil and gas production. Wagaa, an oil ministry veteran of 30 years, also managed a joint programme with foreign oil companies that trains Iraqi oil officials and workers. Some of the remaining managers are said to be pleading with foreign oil companies for advisory roles outside the country in places like Dubai and Amman, Jordan. Finding skilled engineers and managers to put Iraqs dilapidated oil sector back on its feet is almost impossible because of the brazen and deadly attacks by militants and insurgents. Work at Iraqs State Company for Oil Projects, which supervises oil field construction efforts, has dried up because of attacks on executives, including director general Muthanna al-Badri, officials say. Al-Badri remains missing since he was kidnapped last year. In addition to attacks on pipelines and other infrastructure, efforts to restart Iraqs rich northern oil fields have been stymied since the kidnapping last year of Adel Kazzaz, long-time head of the state-run North Oil Co He is also missing. The brain drain has also hurt the drawing up of the regulatory framework of Iraqs long-delayed oil law that will govern the development of the countrys energy resources, Kurdish Oil Minister Ashti Hawrami told Dow Jones Newswires. Officials and analysts say the dwindling numbers of well-qualified Iraqi oil staff is likely to slow eventual contract negotiations between the government and foreign energy companies, even once Iraqs long-delayed hydrocarbons law is passed. It will be difficult getting contract discussions going for all the various companies looking to get in because of the lack of good top-level staff in the country, said a US official in Baghdad. Executives from Royal Dutch Shell have been in talks with Iraq officials this year about exploiting gas reserves. Total and Chevron Corp recently agreed a services pact to develop at least two big oil fields in the country in the coming years. Representatives for all the companies refused to comment on the matter. There is also concern violence against energy officials and installations could get worse in Iraqs oil-rich south as Shia factions there battle each other over political turf amid the gradual withdrawal of British forces from Basra, Iraqs second biggest city in the south and a giant oil export hub. The region is dotted with hundreds of oil wells open to attacks. Iraq last month led the biggest gain in oil output by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries in more than a year, as its exports jumped to 1.7mn bpd. That, however, was due a burst of sales from crude in storage tanks in Turkey that is unlikely to be repeated anytime soon. Iraq crude exports in the first half of this year were 200,000 bpd below the governments targeted level of 1.7mn bpd. |
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Iraq | |
Iraq could double oil output with security | |
2006-05-23 | |
![]() Snow said Iraqs daily production was running at around 1.6 million barrels. Snow said it was heartening that Iraq finally had a government in place under Prime Minister Nuri Al Maliki with a cabinet that includes Shiites, minority Sunnis and Kurds and that it is committed to combating violence. He said the countrys prospects hinge on its success. The framework has now been put in place, but that framework can only produce good economic results when the missing ingredient -- security -- is in place, Snow said. Security is now everything in terms of the path forward. Snow and Shabibi were in the Red Sea resort city for talks on Sunday among members of the Broader Middle East and North Africa (BMENA) group that aims to promote greater regulatory integration and development in the region. The two held a separate meeting on Monday. Iraqs newly named finance minister, Bayan Jabor, was not in Egypt for the discussions. Snow declined to comment when asked about reports that Jabor was disliked by US officials who felt that Jabor, a member of a powerful Iraqi Shiite political group, had failed to rein in Shiite militias while he was interior minister. I dont know him, Snow said, adding that Shabibi had described Jabor as a personal friend who had considerable business experience. I look forward to meeting him soon, Snow said, but added that he was unsure when that might happen. While he and Shabibi did not discuss a timeline within which Iraq needs to establish increased security, Snow said it needed to happen soon to benefit the Iraqi economy. The next six months will be the time for this government to come together, show what it can accomplish, take charge of the security issue, Snow said, so that Iraq is seen as a safer investment site. With security will come investments, with security will come much better performance of the electricity sector, which had been badly hurt by saboteurs. With security will come investment in oil and much higher oil output, Snow said.
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Iraqi interior ministry arrests general over death squad allegations |
2006-05-08 |
Iraq's interior minister said on Sunday his police had arrested a general in the ministry on suspicion of involvement in kidnaps and death squads. Bayan Jabor, who is fighting to keep his job in a new government in the face of criticism that he has tolerated Shi'ite militias inside his ministry, made the announcement in an interview on Al Jazeera television. "We have arrested an officer, a major general ... along with 17 people who kidnapped citizens and in some cases killed them. He is now in jail and under investigation," he said. "We also found a terror group in the 16th brigade that carries out killings of citizens," he added. It was not clear when the arrest was made or whether the case was related to arrests of army and police officers announced previously in the last few weeks. Jabor's Shi'ite Islamist Alliance bloc is pushing for him to keep his post in a new national unity government being formed under Alliance Prime Minister-designate Nuri al-Maliki, negotiators say. But minority Sunni Arabs enraged by sectarian killings, some conducted by men in uniform, are demanding Jabor's resignation. The U.S. ambassador, a key player in the negotiations, has made no secret of the fact that Washington would prefer a new face to lead the ministry. |
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Iraq |
Car bomb kills 6 in Iraq |
2006-04-09 |
A car bomb killed at least six Shi'ite pilgrims south of Baghdad on Saturday, the latest in a wave of attacks that had prompted a fresh warning against civil war in Iraq. The blast in the Shi'ite town of Musayib also wounded 16 people, said police Captain Muthana al-Ma'amouri. Enraged town residents at the scene of the blast threw stones at U.S. troops in Humvees who fired warning shots in the air. One man also blamed fractious Iraqi leaders, who are struggling to form a government four months after elections. "This is because of the Americans. It is their doing while (our) politicians just sit in their seats of power. Is this what they call a democracy?," he yelled as people picked up thick pieces of shrapnel. Just two hours earlier, powerful Shi'ite leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim had urged his followers to stand firm against what he called an al Qaeda campaign to ignite sectarian civil war with bombings like one on Friday that killed at least 70 people. That triple suicide bombing at the Buratha mosque in Baghdad, the biggest single suicide attack on a Shi'ite target since November 2005, raised fresh fears of a full-blown communal conflict, with the United States, Britain and the United Nations quickly urging Iraqi unity. On Thursday, a car bomb near one of the world's most sacred Shi'ite shrines killed at least 15 people in the southern town of Najaf. Hakim's speech, delivered on the anniversary of the execution of top Shi'ite cleric Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr and his sister by Saddam Hussein, called for unity between Iraq's main Shi'ite, Kurdish and Arab Sunni communities. But he also reminded majority Shi'ites of their decades of suffering under Saddam's Sunni-dominated regime and urged them to resist attempts by the al Qaeda leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al Zarqawi, to plunge the country into open civil war. "(Sunni) militants and insurgents want to return Iraq to Saddam's formula," said Hakim, leader of the pro-Iranian Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), a party in the ruling Shi'ite Alliance. "This nation will not fall into the trap of sectarian war that is being pursued by Zarqawi's groups." Sectarian tensions have been rising since the bombing of a Shi'ite shrine on February 22 touched off reprisals and pushed Iraq to the brink of civil war. Hundreds of bodies of people shot or strangled have turned up on Baghdad streets bound, blindfolded and showing signs of torture. The latest bombs provided more proof that Iraqi leaders deadlocked over a government are unable to tackle the bloodshed which is consuming the country. Hakim's Alliance is under intense pressure to replace Ibrahim al-Jaafari as its nominee for prime minister to break the deadlock over postwar Iraq's first full-term government. But Jaafari, who is the serving prime minister, refuses to step aside despite calls from Sunni and Kurdish leaders who say he has failed in office, and even from within his own Alliance. Hakim said repeatedly that Zarqawi and Saddam loyalists would fail to derail the political process. But he could offer no clear timetable on the formation of a government. "After the guidelines of the (Shi'ite) religious establishment, we will proceed to form a national unity government as soon as possible," he said. Interior Minister Bayan Jabor has said he was confident that Zarqawi was no longer a serious threat. But Western intelligence sources disagree and Hakim seems just as concerned as ever, saying the whole region would suffer if he is not defeated. "The battle of today is not just an Iraqi battle. Other countries will suffer and in the future there will be more suffering," he said. "These militant groups oppose all Arab rulers." |
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Zarqawi shifting tactics in response to orders from al-Qaeda high command |
2006-04-03 |
Al Qaeda leader in Iraq Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has shifted tactics, focusing his suicide bombers on Iraqi forces and civilians instead of American troops, the chief U.S. military spokesman said on Thursday. "What we are seeing him do now is shift his target from the coalition forces to Iraqi civilians and Iraqi security forces," Major General Rick Lynch told a news conference. While monthly U.S. casualties have been falling since November, attacks on Iraqi forces are escalating as Zarqawi attempts to undermine efforts to build up the army and security forces, Lynch said. "The number of attacks against Iraqi security force members has increased 35 percent in the last four weeks compared to the previous six months," said Lynch. "That is by design. The enemy knows the Iraqi security forces are increasing in capability." A U.S. troop pullout is contingent on the performance of Iraqi troops, who have watched suicide bombers kill thousands of their comrades. A suicide bomber strapped with explosives killed 40 Iraqi army recruits at a base near the northern city of Mosul this week. Islamic militants have also been carrying out bolder attacks at police stations. Guerrillas attacked the police headquarters and courthouse in the Iraqi town of Miqdadiya this month, killing at least 18 people and releasing prisoners, police said. Zarqawi, who has claimed responsibility for some of the most spectacular suicide bombings in Iraq, has kept a lower profile recently. His large-scale bombings have decreased. Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabor said this week that Zarqawi was no longer a threat. But military intelligence sources in Iraq say they have no reason to believe the Jordanian militant has weakened and he remains a recruiting magnet for young Sunni Arabs. One said recently it appeared that international al Qaeda leaders may have prevailed on Zarqawi to limit attacks on Shi'ite civilians on the grounds this was counter-productive. Lynch said the improved performance of Iraqi forces and their growing ability to carry out operations on their own had contributed to a fall in the number of daily attacks. He noted that suicide bombings, the biggest killers in Iraq had dropped, as had the number of overall assaults. "Last year, May to July, we averaged 50 suicide attacks per month. This year, January to March, it was 24 per month," he said. Previous lulls in insurgent activity have been followed by a frenzy of attacks. Lynch said al Qaeda was now focused on car bombs and roadside bombs to try to ignite a sectarian civil war while carrying out selective assassinations. The bombing of a Shi'ite shrine last month which the United States blamed on al Qaeda triggered reprisals and pushed Iraq closer than ever to sectarian civil war. Lynch said there had been 955 murders or execution-style killings in Baghdad alone since the shrine attack and 1,313 nationwide: "(In) January in Baghdad we averaged 11 murders or executions per day. They peaked at one point in time recently with an average of 36. We have reduced that back to 25." |
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Iraq |
US casualties in Iraq falling steadily since the summer |
2006-04-01 |
Gunmen in police uniform kill and kidnap at electronics shops. A mosque raid draws government charges that U.S. troops run Iraqi forces beyond its control. Bodies turn up on streets as militia death squads roam freely. This weeks violence in Iraq suggests the conflict has entered an ominous new stage where crime gangs, Sunni Arab insurgents and pro-government Shia militias overlap as violence pushes the country closer to sectarian civil war. What began with a murky Sunni revolt against occupation and then the US-backed interim government has exploded into a communal and criminal battlefield where determining who is killing whom -- let alone why -- is getting harder every day. The Sunni insurgency is now complemented by the Shia militias who are getting very powerful and are able to wreak havoc on the Sunnis, said Martin Navias, at the Centre for Defence Studies at Kings College in London. The various groups are killing each other and kidnapping but not openly doing it. It is a type of ethnic cleansing. But it is not an open civil war. Iraqi leaders are struggling to form a unity government more than three months after elections, raising concerns that a widening political vacuum will foster ever more violence. Analysts say that while the new trends were alarming, there were no signs that the violence is about to spill over into open warfare with street battles between Iraqs main Shia, Arab Sunni and ethnic Kurdish groups. A fall in American casualties since last summer suggests that US troops, with growing numbers of Iraqi allies, have made gains over insurgents. March should show one of the lowest monthly US death tolls of the war, possibly the lowest in two years. But measuring success in those terms on that conventional military front is easier than gauging progress in the battle against a complex network of criminals, militias and insurgents -- all of whom can show up in police or army uniforms. Gunmen dressed as police commandos -- precise accounts of the uniforms varied -- killed nine people in an attack on an electronics store in Baghdad on Wednesday, one of a series of raids against lucrative businesses in the capital this week. Workers, including women, were rounded up and then killed. On Monday and Tuesday, a total of 35 people were abducted in four attacks, including two on electronics dealers and one on a money-changer where the attackers also stole $50,000. Determining whether they were criminals or insurgents seeking funds seems impossible in Iraqs chaos. Police officers in the area where the raids were carried out said they had no idea who was responsible. Many security groups work in Iraq and nobody knows who they are or what they are doing, said one police lieutenant colonel, who would give his name only as the familiar Abu Mohammed for fear of reprisals from his shadowy adversaries. There are now many organised crime groups working under formal cover, as militias or security companies. Its hard to figure out who they are, let alone who is behind them. One businessman who said he was familiar with some of the businesses targeted said several belonged to one man, suggesting attacks by racketeers. That could not be confirmed, however. Hazim Al Naimi, a politics professor at Baghdads Mustansiriya University, said the raids were another disturbing sign that the conflict has been escalating since the bombing of a Shia shrine last month touched off bloody reprisals. Since then, hundreds of bodies have turned up in the streets, many shot or strangled with signs of torture. The crisis has become very complicated now. We are seeing raids on electronics shops that make no sense. It could be a campaign to wreck the economy so Iraqis dont set up businesses. Its hard to tell, said Naimi. Al Qaedas Abu Musab Al Zarqawi, the man who has been most predictable in Iraqs conflict, has been keeping a low profile. His suicide bombers have eased off, leading Interior Minister Bayan Jabor to conclude Zarqawi is no longer a threat. But US officers say he is shifting attacks away from American soldiers and Shia civilians to Iraqi security forces and more targeted killing, raising fears of new violence as the authorities try to grapple with deepening mayhem. Long-term stability ultimately depends on whether Iraqi forces can take on militants and insurgents on their own. US commanders have been praising Iraqi special forces for a raid on a Baghdad mosque compound on Sunday night which left what they said were 16 terrorists dead. But as government-run state television showed lengthy footage of the bullet-ridden bodies, Shia leaders accused the Americans of a massacre of unarmed worshippers and directing Iraqi forces without a green light from the Iraqi government. Police and local residents said the compound was a base for the Mehdi Army, a Shia militia. But the US military says it still has no idea who the 16 were despite extensive intelligence work ahead of the raid and the rescue of a tortured hostage. People ought to be focused on the fact that 50 members of the Iraqi special operations forces planned and conducted this. And it was flawless. Flawless, US Major General Rick Lynch told a news conference on Thursday. |
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Iraq |
18 bodies found in Iraq |
2006-03-09 |
![]() Three years after U.S. troops invaded to topple Saddam Hussein, the U.S. State Department said killings by the U.S.-backed government or its agents had increased in 2005 and that members of sectarian militias dominated many police units. Iraq's Shi'ite interior minister, a hate figure for many Sunnis who accuse him of condoning death squads, escaped an apparent assassination attempt when a roadside bomb blasted his convoy. Minister Bayan Jabor, however, was not in his car. In its annual report on human rights abuses worldwide, the State Department said: "Police abuses included threats, intimidation, beatings, and suspension by the arms or legs, as well as the reported use of electric drills and cords and the application of electric shocks." Dozens of Iraqi private security guards were seized at their compound by men in police uniform on Wednesday, but in typical confusion Iraqi security officials contradicted each other over whether they were arrested or kidnapped. Three senior officials in the Interior Ministry insisted no raid was authorised on the company in Baghdad. Two other officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the private guards had been arrested by genuine police commandos. The bombing of an important Shi'ite shrine in Samarra on Feb. 22 has pitched Iraq towards civil war, unleashing reprisal sectarian killings and deepening the mutual suspicion between the country's majority Shi'ite Muslims and minority Sunnis. The violence has complicated faltering efforts to form a government of national unity three months after elections. Iraqi leaders, struggling to agree on who should hold the top posts, are due to meet President Jalal Talabani on Thursday to decide on a way forward. Parliament is supposed to meet by Sunday. The dumping of bodies bearing signs of torture and killed execution-style is a feature of the violence. The 18 bodies discovered by U.S. troops in western Baghdad late on Tuesday had all been garrotted and had their hands bound with plastic ties, police and hospital officials said. The victims, a mixture of middle-aged and young men in civilian clothes, carried no identifying papers, police said. A policeman at the Yarmuk hospital morgue pointed to their clothing and long hair as an indication some may have been religious extremists linked to al Qaeda. Reuters reporters who saw the bodies said many appeared to be Iraqis. Police sources said only one had so far been identified by a relative. He was a guard at an oil refinery in southern Baghdad. The policeman at the hospital said many of the bloodied bodies appeared to have been beaten while some had small burn marks, suggesting they were tortured before being killed. Senior officials, aware of the potential for sectarian anger if it becomes clear all are either Sunni or Shi'ite Muslims, made no formal comment on the religious identities of the dead. Iraqi police said the bodies were dumped near the Amriya district, a stronghold of Sunni insurgent groups. Sunnis have accused the Shi'ite-led government's police and other security forces of abducting and killing Sunni civilians -- an accusation Interior Minister Jabor and the police deny. Interior Ministry vehicles normally used to transport Jabor and his aides were attacked as they left the ministry on Wednesday. A roadside bomb destroyed one car in the convoy, killing two and wounding five, a police source told Reuters. It follows the assassination of the top Iraqi general in Baghdad, a Sunni, by a sniper in the capital on Monday. More than 500 people have been killed since the Samarra bombings, according to the most conservative official figures. Despite the daily bombings and shootings there is a relative lull in the violence and officials have said the immediate crisis seems to be over -- for the time being at least. But the U.S. ambassador conceded on Tuesday Iraq could still descend into civil war, saying Americans "opened Pandora's Box" when they toppled Saddam in 2003 and another incident like that in Samarra could push it to the brink of war again. In political negotiations, Sunnis and Kurds refuse to accept Shi'ite Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari should stay on. His critics say he has failed to bring security or prosperity during the year in which he has been interim prime minister. |
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US general in Iraq was aware of prisoner abuse | ||
2005-12-09 | ||
WASHINGTON: The top US general in Iraq was aware in June of reports that Iraqi security forces had abused prisoners in their custody, months before US forces in November found a bunker filled with detainees badly beaten by Iraqi personnel, a memo obtained on Wednesday showed. âOver the past several months, I have received reports of serious physical abuse of detainees by ISF (Iraqi Security Forces),â Army Gen George Casey, commander of US forces in Iraq, said in a June 22 memo obtained by Reuters. âI have forwarded those reports to the Iraqi ministries of defence and interior for appropriate action,â Casey added. The memo did not state the nature of the abuse. During a raid at a secret Baghdad bunker, US forces on Nov 13 found 173 men and teen-age boys, many of them malnourished, beaten and showing signs of torture.
Rumsfeld has asked military commanders to devise clear rules for how US personnel worldwide should take action if they see detainees being abused by foreign forces outside the United States. âItâs for him to better understand what the policies and procedures are, and to also make sure that we understand that the sergeant, the private, the lieutenant, the captain on the ground have a clear understanding of what theyâre responsibilities are,â Whitman said. | ||
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US Arrests 22 "Elk Hunters" |
2005-12-05 |
![]() The 22 Kuwaitis are reported to have had an official hunting licence, issued by the Sulaimaniya governorate of Iraq. Kuwaiti tribal leaders and one MP have urged Iraqi vice-president Ghazi Yawar and interior minister Bayan Jabor Solagh to release them, but without success. Since Saddam Hussein's regime was brought down in 2003, several Kuwaitis have been arrested in Iraq or while trying to enter Iraq from Syria, and have admitted to being members of groups involved in the resistance against US troops in Iraq. Last month eight armed Kuwaitis and two Saudis, who also claimed to be on a game-hunting trip, were caught trying to cross the border from Jordan into Iraq. |
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Jordan may face al-Qaeda insurgency |
2005-11-22 |
Pro-Western Jordan, spared major al Qaeda violence before this month's suicide bombings, risks copycat attacks by homegrown Islamist militants inspired by the insurgency in Iraq, security sources and analysts say. But Jordan might now experience a violent homegrown campaign like one launched in Saudi Arabi by local al Qaeda supporters after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the sources fear. "These attacks could encourage some militant radicals â despite the wide popular condemnation and outrage â to do something similar in Jordan," said Mohammad Najjar, a political analyst who tracks Islamist radical groups. Jordanian authorities say their vigilance has foiled many militant plots to bomb well-protected embassies and tourist sites. But one security official, who asked not to be named, said he feared militants might now switch to easier targets. "These soft targets could be more potent now in their eyes than the traditional ones," he said, arguing that the militants were not deterred by popular outrage over attacks on civilians. "They have declared open-ended war and inflicting revenge on the state, so boundaries between civilian and military targets no longer mean much for them," the official added. He said the authorities had detained several hundred Jordanian Islamists in recent months for plotting attacks at home, far more than in previous years. The official said their aim was to destabilize Jordan because of the monarchy's pro-Western stance. Previously, most militants had been seized returning from Iraq or trying to go there to join the anti-U.S. insurgency. That traffic has thinned, security sources say, though it is not clear whether this is because of tighter border security or because more Iraqis have joined Zarqawi's group, taking command positions once held by Jordanians or other Arab fighters. If Jordanian militants cannot reach Iraq, that has not dimmed their zeal, the sources say, with many collecting donations for Zarqawi and looking to him for inspiration even if they do not have organizational links with al Qaeda. "The Jordanian cells are scattered and fragmented but the common denominator is that they are inspired by Zarqawi's tactics," one security source said. A Jordanian official, who asked not to be named, said local militants identified with fighters across the border. "They believe if they cannot reach that target they can reach another in Jordan as an extension of the jihad (holy war) in Iraq." Fears that instability is spilling over Iraq's borders were heightened last month when Iraqi Interior Minister Bayan Jabor said documents found with a slain Iraqi lieutenant of Zarqawi showed a plan to send Arab militants home to widen the struggle. There was no way to verify his statement. While anger over Iraq is one factor fuelling Sunni militancy in Jordan, economic hardship is another â often made harder to bear by the ostentatious lifestyle of the wealthy few. "When there is poverty and despair this helps in recruiting these young people," said Adnan Abu Odeh, a former adviser to the Jordanian royal family. "The poor go to mosques as an escape from this situation and then they are recruited." Such radicalized youngsters often come from impoverished cities such as Irbid and Zarqa, home town of Zarqawi. A few are trained in Lebanon or Syria. Others have become battle-hardened in Iraq, the Jordanian security source said. |
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SCIRI denies link to prisoner bunker | ||
2005-11-17 | ||
![]() The Badr Organisation, formerly known as the Badr Brigade, was formed in exile in Iran during the 1980s as the armed wing of SCIRI, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, which fought against Saddam Hussein's regime from exile. Since Saddam's overthrow, SCIRI has become a potent force in Iraqi politics -- the interior minister, Bayan Jabor, hails from SCIRI, one of two main Shi'ite parties in the government. Many Iraqis, particularly members of the Sunni Arab minority, accuse Badr and other militias linked to the government of infiltrating the police and security services and targeting Sunnis suspected of links to the insurgency. The government and the militias have repeatedly denied the accusations, although in July this year the government did admit that some of its new security forces were resorting to the same sort of torture and abuses as were seen under Saddam. | ||
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