http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2527724.ece

Teachers' killings turn Sunni Iraqis against al-Qa'ida 
By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad 
Published: 10 May 2007 
The murder of Juma'a, the headmaster of a primary school in the Ghaziliyah 
district of west Baghdad, explains why many Sunnis are increasingly hostile 
toal- Qa'ida in Iraq. At the same time, the Sunni community as a whole 
continues to support armed resistance to the US-led occupation. 

Juma'a, a teacher in his forties with three daughters and one son, was told by 
members of al-Qa'ida in his Sunni neighbourhood to close his school. Other 
headmasters got the same message but also refused to comply. The demand from 
al-Qa'ida seems to have come because it sees schools as being under the control 
of the government. 

Juma'a knew the danger he was running. A few months earlier, he was detained by 
another Sunni insurgent group as he queued for gasoline. The insurgents 
suspected he was carrying fake identity papers and was really a Shia. They held 
him for three days until he proved to them he was a Sunni. 

Two weeks later, Juma'a was kidnapped again. This time there was no release. 
Other headmasters were kidnapped at the same time and their bodies found soon 
after. His family wanted to look in the Baghdad morgue, the Bab al-Modam, but 
faced a problem. The morgue is deemed by Sunni to be under the control of Shia 
militiaman who may kill or arrest Sunni looking for murdered relatives. 

Finally, Juma'a's sister-in-law, Wafa, and niece went to the morgue on the 
grounds that women are less likely to be attacked. They passed through a room 
filled with headless bodies and severed limbs and looked at photographs of the 
faces of the dead. In 15 minutes, they identified Juma'a, but they were not 
strong enough to transport his body home in a cheap wooden coffin. 

The revolt in Iraq against the occupation has been confined hitherto to the 
five- million-strong Sunni community. The growing unpopularity of al-Qa'ida in 
Iraq among the Sunni is partly a revulsion against its massacres of Shia by 
suicide bombers that lead to tit-for-tat killings of Sunni. 

It is also because al-Qa'ida kills Sunni who have only limited connections with 
the government. Those killed include minor officials in the agriculture 
ministry, barbers who give un-Islamic haircuts and garbage collectors. The 
murder of the latter is because it is convenient for al-Qa'ida to leave large 
heaps of rubbish uncollected on roadsides in which to hide mines. 

The most visible sign of the revolt against al-Qa'ida in Iraq is along the 
roads passing through the deserts of Anbar province to the west of Baghdad to 
Jordan and Syria. In recent weeks, the road to Syria has been controlled by 
members of the Abu Risha tribe, led by Mahmoud Abu Risha and supported by the 
US. 

It may be al-Qa'ida has overplayed its hand. In January, its leaders announced 
the establishment of the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI) based in western Iraq. 
That united resistance groups sympathetic to al-Qa'ida. The ISI began to purge 
resistance activists disagreeing with its line. Sunni families were forced to 
make contributions and send some of their young men to fight alongside the ISI. 

The Iraqi insurgency is notoriously fragmented and its politics are shadowy. By 
one account, the ISI got chased out of Mosul in the north soon after being 
formed and took refuge in the Himrin mountains south of Kirkuk. Though shaken, 
it remains effective under the leadership of Omar al-Baghdadi, a former army 
officer. 

The ISI, as with other resistance groups, owes its military effectiveness in 
large part to well-trained officers from the Iraqi army and, in particular, the 
Republican Guards. 

Windows at the US embassy in Baghdad were rattled by an explosion yesterday 
during a visit by Dick Cheney. The US Vice-President had arrived unannounced to 
see Iraqi political leaders. Washington may be getting worried that the 
so-called "surge", the 30,000 US reinforcements being sent to Iraq, are not 
producing the dramatic results hoped for by President George Bush. 

Meanwhile, a suicide bomber in a truck packed with explosives killed at least 
19 people and wounded 80 in the Kurdish capital of Arbil. It was one of the 
first bombs in Kurdistan for over a year and blew up outside the Kurdish 
Interior Ministry, leaving an enormous crater.


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