Iraq is Disintegrating
By PATRICK COCKBURN
05/21/06 "Counterpunch"
-- -- Khanaqin, North-East Iraq - Across
central Iraq, there is an exodus of people fleeing for their
lives as sectarian assassins and death squads hunt them down. At
ground level, Iraq is disintegrating as ethnic cleansing takes
hold on a massive scale.
The state of Iraq now resembles Bosnia at the height of the
fighting in the 1990s when each community fled to places where
its members were a majority and were able to defend themselves.
"Be gone by evening prayers or we will kill you," warned one of
four men who called at the house of Leila Mohammed, a pregnant
mother of three children in the city of Baquba, in Diyala
province north-east of Baghdad. He offered chocolate to one of
her children to try to find out the names of the men in the
family.
Mrs Mohammed is a Kurd and a Shia in Baquba, which has a
majority of Sunni Arabs. Her husband, Ahmed, who traded fruit in
the local market, said: "They threatened the Kurds and the Shia
and told them to get out. Later I went back to try to get our
furniture but there was too much shooting and I was trapped in
our house. I came away with nothing." He and his wife now live
with nine other relatives in a three-room hovel in Khanaqin.
The same pattern of intimidation, flight and death is being
repeated in mixed provinces all over Iraq. By now Iraqis do not
have to be reminded of the consequences of ignoring threats.
In Baquba, with a population of 350,000, gunmen last week
ordered people off a bus, separated the men from the women and
shot dead 11 of them. Not far away police found the mutilated
body of a kidnapped six-year-old boy for whom a ransom had
already been paid.
The sectarian warfare in Baghdad is sparsely reported but the
provinces around the capital are now so dangerous for reporters
that they seldom, if ever, go there, except as embeds with US
troops. Two months ago in Mosul, I met an Iraqi army captain
from Diyala who said Sunni and Shia were slaughtering each other
in his home province. "Whoever is in a minority runs," he said.
"If forces are more equal they fight it out."
It was impossible to travel to Baquba, the capital of Diyala,
from Baghdad without extreme danger of being killed on the road.
But I thought that if I took the road from Kurdistan leading
south, kept close to the Iranian border and stayed in
Kurdish-controlled territory I could reach Khanaqin, a town of
75,000 people in eastern Diyala. If what the army captain said
about the killings and mass flight was true then there were
bound to be refugees who had reached there.
I thought it was too dangerous to go beyond the town into the
Arab part of Diyala province, once famous for its fruit, since
it is largely under insurgent control. But, as I had hoped, it
was possible to talk to Kurds who had sought refuge in Khanaqin
over the past month.
Salam Hussein Rostam, a police lieutenant in charge of
registering and investigating people arriving in terror from all
over Iraq, gestured to an enormous file of paper beside him.
"I've received 200 families recently, most of them in the last
week," he said. This means that about one thousand people have
sought refuge in one small town. Lt Rostam said that the
refugees were coming from all over Iraq. In some cases they had
left not because they were threatened with death but because
they were fired from their jobs for belonging to the wrong
community. "I know of two health workers from Baghdad who were
sacked simply because they were Kurds and not Shia," he said.
This was probably because the Health Ministry in Baghdad is
controlled by the party of Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia cleric.
The flight of the middle class started about six months after
the invasion in 2003 as it became clear Iraq was becoming more,
not less, violent. They moved to Jordan, Syria and Egypt. The
suicide bombing campaign was largely directed against Shias who
only began to retaliate after they had taken over the government
in May last year. Interior Ministry forces arrested, tortured
and killed Sunnis.
But a decisive step towards sectarian civil war took place when
the Shia Al-Askari shrine in Samarra was blown up on 22 February
this year. Some 1,300 Sunni were killed in retaliation.
Kadm Darwish Ali, a policeman from Baquba and now also a
refugee, said: "Everything got worse after Samarra. I had been
threatened with death before but now I felt every time I
appeared in the street I was likely to die."
Every community has its atrocity stories. The cousin of a friend
was a Sunni Arab who worked in the wholly Shia district of
Qadamiyah in west Baghdad. One day last month he disappeared.
Three days later his body was discovered on a rubbish dump in
another Shia district. "His face was so badly mutilated," said
my friend, that "we only knew it was him from a wart on his
arm."
Since the destruction of the mosque in Samarra sectarian warfare
has broken out in every Iraqi city where there is a mixed
population. In many cases the minority is too small to stand and
fight. Sunnis have been fleeing Basra after a series of
killings. Christians are being eliminated in Mosul in the north.
Shias are being killed or driven out of cities and towns north
of Baghdad such as Baquba or Samarra itself.
Dujail, 40 miles north of Baghdad, is the Shia village where
Saddam Hussein carrying out a judicial massacre, killing 148
people after an attempt to assassinate him in 1982. He is on
trial for the killings. The villagers are now paying a terrible
price for giving evidence at his trial.
In the past few months Sunni insurgents have been stopping them
at an improvised checkpoint on the road to Baghdad. Masked
gunmen glance at their identity cards and if under place of
birth is written "Dujail" they kill them. So far 20 villagers
have been murdered and 20 have disappeared.
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