7 al-Zarqawi insurgents found slain in retaliation for killing 

By John Ward Anderson 
The Washington Post

 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - When more than 80 bodies were found last week at four
different places in Iraq, a fifth gruesome discovery attracted little
notice. 

In the violent city of Ramadi, a center of Sunni insurgent activity 60 miles
west of Baghdad, the bodies of seven men were found lined up in an
unfinished house on the western outskirts of town, according to
eyewitnesses. 

Unlike the corpses elsewhere, which were mostly Iraqi police and soldiers,
the bodies in Ramadi apparently were foreigners, fighters working for
Jordanian militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who has claimed responsibility for
suicide bombings, kidnappings and assassinations. 

Each of the seven had been shot in the head or torso. The bodies were
secretly buried in a local cemetery, the witnesses said. 

"My cousins are the ones who killed them," said Jabbar Khalaf Marawi, 42, a
former army officer and Communist Party member in Ramadi. Marawi said the
slayings were carried out by members of his Dulaimi clan in retaliation for
the Oct. 2 killing of a clan leader, Lt. Col. Sulaiman Ahmed Dulaimi, the
Iraqi National Guard commander for Ramadi and Fallujah, by al-Zarqawi's
group. 

Dulaimi and three bodyguards were traveling through Khaldiya, a small town
about six miles east of Ramadi, where they were ambushed. The bodyguards
were shot and killed on the spot, and Dulaimi was abducted. 

His body was found two days later in a youth center on the shores of Lake
Tharthar, 20 miles north of Khaldiya. Both his legs were broken in multiple
places, his fingernails were removed and he had two bullet wounds in his
chest, according to his autopsy report. 

A statement by al-Zarqawi's group asserted responsibility for the killing,
accusing Dulaimi of being an "agent ... who works for the Americans." It
said he had "confessed" to giving U.S. forces valuable information about
weak spots in the guerrillas' defenses in the southern part of Fallujah. 

Witnesses to the finding of the bodies in the house said they never went to
the local police or foreign military forces to report finding the bodies,
fearing that they would be accused of complicity in the slayings or that the
killers would return to punish them for talking. 

"I feared telling the Iraqi army because they would detain me and accuse me
of being involved in the killings," said Ali Omar, 32, a motorcycle mechanic
who discovered the bodies last Saturday. 

Instead, he said he went to Ramadi Hospital and told an emergency-room
doctor about his discovery, but the doctor refused to get involved. "He told
me, 'Why bring problems on yourself? Leave them until they find them,' "
Omar said. 

A notice from al-Zarqawi's group was posted on the gate outside a Ramadi
mosque this week announcing the death of the seven men and calling their
killers "blasphemers, far from the religion of God, who betrayed the
mujaheddin after they trusted them." It vowed to find the killers, described
as "followers of the occupiers," and behead them. 

At the Dulaimi family compound this week in the Abu Marie neighborhood of
Ramadi, Sulaiman's father, Hamad Dulaimi, 73, sat on a bench as a group of
children played in the yard. The surrounding streets and rooftops were
crowded with armed men. 

"These are the children of Sulaiman, who was killed by those bastards," he
said. 

Sulaiman's wife joined him: "Now we can talk, because we got revenge," she
said. 

"If I didn't know that my son was innocent, I wouldn't have sent his cousins
for revenge," the father said. "But for we Arabs, the matter of revenge is
like honor. Both are the same for us." 

As for al-Zarqawi's promise to retaliate, he said: "We got our revenge, and
we have our precautions. Let them do as they like." 

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