http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LG07Ak02.html

 Jul 7, 2010 

Sex scandal rocks Iraqi's Shi'ites 
By IWPR-trained reporters 


BAGHDAD - A top-level Shi'ite cleric has been defrocked over sexually explicit 
videos posted on the Internet that have outraged devout communities across Iraq 
and tarnished the image of the sect's highest religious body. 

Munaf Hamdan Naji al-Mosawi, a close aide to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani for 
11 years, has gone into hiding after intimate footage apparently recorded on 
his mobile phone ended up in the hands of neighbors, who marched to his home in 
Amara to demand the return of their religious donations, according to Institute 
for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) sources - religious figures in Amara and 
Najaf, where Sistani's office is based. 

The controversy, which has yet be reported by the national media - presumably 
because of its sensitivity - has been widely
discussed and reported on the Internet. It has ignited debate about the 
personal conduct of religious representatives and drawn charges of hypocrisy 
from Shi'ite followers around the country. 

Some commentators see the alleged incident as a blow to the reputation of the 
Marjaya, Iraq's highest Shi'ite religious body, and say it even questions the 
judgement of the deeply revered and popular Sistani, one of the world's 
highest-ranking Shi'ite clerics. 

As the first public sex scandal to hit a senior religious leader in Iraq, the 
alleged videos have become a burning controversy - despite claims from local 
reporters that clerics and officials in the ultra-conservative city of Amara 
ordered them to ignore it. 

"I watched the videos. The scenes show [Mosawi] has no understanding of 
morality or ethics. A cleric is a symbol of his religion. When they do 
something wrong like this, the whole religion can seem wrong to the followers," 
said Mohammad Hussein, 45, a Shi'ite government worker in Amara. 

IWPR sources say the footage, which became public when Mosawi lost his phone's 
memory card, allegedly shows the cleric naked and involved in sexual acts with 
his wife and, in a separate video, another woman with whom he had a muta'a, or 
temporary marriage. Locals who have seen the complete contents of the card 
claim there are images of as many as 18 other women. 

IWPR sources say the videos were quickly spread by locals through cell phones 
and some were later uploaded on the Internet. 
By June 29, one of the many non-pornographic versions of the alleged videos 
posted on the YouTube website had nearly 80,000 views. Some of the videos had 
been doctored anonymously into anti-Shi'ite propaganda. 

According to sources familiar with the Shi'ite faith, that Mosawi was allegedly 
engaged in sex with the two women is not the problem. The fact he allegedly 
filmed the said encounters, however, is considered beyond the pale, especially 
for a leading cleric. 

When the scandal became known to his colleagues, Mosawi was quickly denounced 
and stripped of his position as Sistani's representative in Amara and 
surrounding Maysan province, IWPR sources say. 

"Ayatollah Sistani found out about this incident from ordinary people who came 
to our office and told us that [Mosawi's] videos had defamed the Marjaya's 
reputation and the reputation of all Shi'ites," said a cleric in Sistani's 
office in Najaf, who declined to be named as he was not allowed to speak about 
the incident. 

"After we checked with our people in Maysan province, Ayatollah Sistani issued 
a statement to us clarifying that Mosawi was no longer representing the 
Marjaya." 

According IWPR sources, Mosawi's location is still unknown. Authorities in 
Maysan province have issued arrest warrants for anyone caught watching or 
distributing the alleged videos, but no charges have been filed against Mosawi. 

IWPR sought to contact Mosawi for comment but was unable to track him down. 

"[Mosawi's] action is completely unethical and the situation in Maysan is 
unstable. We have worked hard to maintain security here, and it hurts to see 
such footage being watched by young men and women," Saad Hussein al-Mosawi, 
spokesman of the Maysan provincial council, said. 

In Amara, Mosawi's neighbors and followers have watched the events unfold with 
disbelief. 

"We were really shocked when we saw the cleric in those videos. We considered 
him a sacred person. He is a devout example to us and we used to pay him zakat 
[religious donations]. As his neighbor, we never had any doubts about him. I am 
shocked just like everybody. and now I am worried about the women in my 
family," Jawad Kadhim, 40, a schoolteacher and neighbor, said. 

The families of the women in the videos have so far reserved their anger for 
Mosawi rather than their relatives, but there are concerns of revenge from 
tradition-bound tribesmen. 

A tribal leader, Shiekh Abdul Hussein Jabber al-Maliki, related to the second 
woman in the videos, said she would not be punished because "it was not her 
fault, it was his". 

"We are calling on the Marjaya to check its deputies and representatives more 
closely to avoid such actions in the future. Events like this can cause endless 
fights and battles we have no time for," he said. 

As the story makes its way through Iraq's bazaars and teahouses, others have 
questioned the Marjaya's process of vetting its members and the integrity of 
institution itself. 

"When Sistani was issuing fatwas about Iraqi issues, his followers used to say 
that he is most aware person in Iraq - aware of everything. So, where has his 
awareness gone?" asked Abu Zamel, 55, a Sunni and government employee in 
Baghdad . 

Ammar Naser, 28, a Shi'ite engineer in Baghdad , said, "Really, I am 
astonished. For two days people have been telling me about this story, and I 
really have to consider whether or not to keep following the orders of the 
Marjaya and Sistani." 

But members of Sistani's inner circle have downplayed any damage to the 
ayatollah's prestige. 

"Ayatollah Sistani is a respected leader not only in Iraq , but all over the 
world. His reputation will never be affected by an ugly act such as this," said 
a Marjaya member who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the 
subject. 

However, Sheikh Haider Abdul Ghaffar al-Ansari, a senior cleric in Amara and a 
Sistani adviser, admits the scandal has shaken the Shi'ite community. "Mosawi 
is no longer a representative of the Marjaya, Ayatollah Sistani has removed him 
from his position. We do not know where he is, and he does not represent the 
Marjaya at all," he said. 

"Although the incident seems to push people away from their religion, I have 
noticed that the number of Shi'ite Muslims attending prayer services is 
increasing. Even so, I think this incident will push us back two years in terms 
of time." 

(This article originally appeared in Institute for War and Peace Reporting. 
Used with permission )

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