http://www.cbsnews.com:80/stories/2007/01/05/iraq/main2332897.shtml

 


Sectarian Rhetoric Flies In Baghdad


Sunni Group Says Iraq Leaders Linked To Shiite Militias, Government Calls
Comment Dangerous


A prominent Sunni Arab group charged Friday that some officials in the Iraqi
government have links with Shiite militias involved in sectarian violence
and said authorities should be held responsible for any attacks by the armed
groups. 

The Iraqi government said the group's claims were false and could incite
rebellion. 

A Sunni clerical group, the Association of Muslim Scholars, said it had
obtained information that militias were planning to attack neighborhoods in
Baghdad, in line with bloody assaults this year pitting members of Iraq's
majority Shiites against Sunni Arabs who dominated the country under Saddam
Hussein. 

"We also have come to know that some officials in this government know of
this criminal scheme, which raises suspicions that they are collaborating
with these militias," the association said. 

"The Association of Muslim Scholars holds the current Iraqi government and
the occupation forces responsible for any injustice against Iraqi people,"
said the group, which is believed to have links to the Sunni Arab-led
insurgency fighting government and U.S.-led forces. 

A significant portion of the Iraqi national police is believed to be aligned
with militias, and U.S. officials have said efforts are under way to weed
out corrupt security agents. 

The office of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said the Sunni group's
statement was wrong. 

"What has been written in the statement of the Association of Muslim
Scholars is absolutely incorrect and it could provoke sedition," al-Maliki's
office said. "We hold the association responsible for anything that could
happen as a result of this." 

In other developments: 

*  Police in the southern city of Basra reported that an American civilian
and two Iraqis were abducted Friday, according to Voices of Iraq, an
independent news agency. The U.S. Embassy said it was investigating the
report. 

*  French President Jacques Chirac said the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq
destabilized the entire Middle East and caused terrorism to spread, adding
that the problems in Iraq justified France's strong opposition to the war.
"As France foresaw and feared, the war in Iraq caused upheavals whose
effects have not yet finished unraveling," Chirac said Friday in his New
Year's message to French ambassadors. 

*  Mortar rounds killed four civilians on the outskirts of Baghdad on
Friday. The mortar attack occurred in the Shiite neighborhood of
Zaafaraniyah, nine miles southeast of the center of the Iraqi capital, a
police officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized
to talk to media. The attack killed four civilians and injured eleven, he
said. 

*  Gunmen attacked an Iraqi army checkpoint north of the capital, killing
four soldiers. The Iraqi soldiers were killed at dawn at a checkpoint in
Duluiyah, 45 miles north of Baghdad, according to the joint operations
office of Salahuddin province. Three other soldiers were injured. 

*  Clashes broke out between Sunni Arab and Shiite militants in Baghdad's
mixed western Amil district, minutes after a mortar round hit a house in a
Sunni neighborhood, injuring five civilians, police said. One Shiite
militiaman was killed and three others were wounded. The fighting ended when
U.S. and Iraqi forces rushed to the area, according to police. 

*  Police agents from the Interior Ministry detained three Iraqi insurgents
linked to al Qaeda during a raid in Iskandariyah, 30 miles south of Baghdad,
police Capt. Muthana Khalid said. Separately, Iraqi troops captured four
murder suspects in an operation Wednesday in Sadr City, a poor Shiite area
in eastern Baghdad where militias have a strong presence, the U.S. military
said. The suspects were believed to be "leaders of a kidnapping and murder
cell responsible for the deaths of Iraqi civilians," and were suspected of
directing mortar attacks linked to Baghdad's sectarian war, the military
said. 

*  President Bush said Thursday he wished the execution of Saddam Hussein "
<http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/01/04/politics/main2332192.shtml> had
gone in a more dignified way." After conferring with Iraq's prime minister,
Bush also said he will make a speech next week announcing his decisions
about how to proceed with the nearly 4-year-old war. 



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