Iraqi health minister: ‘150,000
civilians killed in war’
By Steven Hurst
Associated Press
11/10/06 "AP" -- -- BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A stunning new death
count emerged Thursday, as Iraq's health minister estimated
150,000 civilians have been killed in the war -- about three
times previously accepted estimates.
Moderate Sunni Muslims, meanwhile, threatened to walk away
from politics and pick up guns, while the Shiite-dominated
government renewed pressure on the United States to unleash
the Iraqi army and claimed it could crush violence in six
months.
After Democrats swept to majorities in both houses of the US
Congress and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld resigned,
Iraqis appeared unsettled and seemed to sense the potential
for an even bloodier conflict because future American policy
is uncertain.
As a result, positions hardened on both sides of the
country's deepening sectarian divide.
Previous estimates of Iraq deaths held that 45,000 to 50,000
have been killed in the nearly 44-month-old conflict,
according to partial figures from Iraqi institutions and
media reports. No official count has ever been available.
Health Minister Ali Al-Shemari gave his new estimate of
150,000 to reporters during a visit to Vienna, Austria. He
later told The Associated Press that he based the figure on
an estimate of 100 bodies per day brought to morgues and
hospitals -- though such a calculation would come out closer
to 130,000 in total.
"It is an estimate," Al-Shemari said. He blamed Sunni
insurgents, Wahhabis -- Sunni religious extremists -- and
criminal gangs for the deaths.
Hassan Salem, of the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI, said the 150,000 figure
included civilians, police and the bodies of people who were
abducted, later found dead and collected at morgues run by
the Health Ministry. SCIRI is Iraq's largest Shiite
political organization and holds the largest number of seats
in parliament.
In October, the British medical journal The Lancet published
a controversial study contending nearly 655,000 Iraqis have
died because of the war -- a far higher death toll than
other estimates. The study, which was dismissed by President
Bush and other US officials as not credible, was based on
interviews of households and not a body count.
Al-Shemari disputed that figure Thursday.
"Since three and a half years, since the change of the
Saddam regime, some people say we have 600,000 are killed.
This is an exaggerated number. I think 150 [thousand] is
okay," he said.
Accurate figures on the number of people who have died in
the Iraq conflict have long been the subject of debate.
Police and hospitals often give widely conflicting figures
of those killed in major bombings. In addition, death
figures are reported through multiple channels by government
agencies that function with varying efficiency.
As Al-Shemari issued the startling new estimate, the head of
the Baghdad central morgue said Thursday he was receiving as
many as 60 violent death victims each day at his facility
alone. Dr. Abdul-Razzaq Al-Obaidi said those deaths did not
include victims of violence whose bodies were taken to the
city's many hospital morgues or those who were removed from
attack scenes by relatives and quickly buried according to
Muslim custom.
Al-Obaidi said the morgue had received 1,600 violent death
victims in October, one of the bloodiest months of the
conflict. US forces suffered 105 deaths last month, the
fourth highest monthly toll.
At least 45 Iraqis were killed or found dead in continuing
sectarian violence Thursday, with 16 of the victims killed
in bombings at Baghdad markets. For the fifth straight day,
insurgent and militia mortar teams traded fire in the
capital's northern neighborhoods.
Al-Shemari, while not explaining the death toll estimate,
was more precise about the government's increasingly public
and insistent demands for a speedier US transfer of
authority to Iraqi forces and the withdrawal of American
troops to their bases and from Iraq's cities and towns.
"The army of America didn't do its job...They tie the hands
of my government," said Al-Shemari, a Shiite.
"They should hand us the power. We are a sovereign country,"
he said, adding that the first step would be for American
forces to leave population centers.
Al-Shemari is a controversial figure and a member of the
movement of radical anti-American cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr.
Some US officials have complained that the ministry has
diverted supplies to Al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia.
In August, US troops arrested seven of Al-Shemari's personal
guards in a raid on his office. The US never explained the
raid, but Iraqi officials said Americans suspected the
guards were part of a militia.
Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki, who also has close ties to
Al-Sadr, told Bush in a video conference last month that he
would make renewal of the UN mandate under which the US
keeps forces in Iraq conditional on a rapid handover of
power.
Al-Maliki also said at the time that US forces should clear
out of Iraq's cities, according to top aide Hassan Al-Suneid.
He said the White House agreed, although that was never
confirmed in Washington.
Last week, Al-Maliki rejected a demand by a visiting top
administration official that he move to disband Shiite
militias by year's end. A senior Al-Maliki adviser, who
refused to be identified by name because of the sensitive
nature of the talks, said the prime minister told US
National Intelligence Director John Negroponte it would be
suicidal for the Iraqi leader to move against the heavily
armed militias.
The militias are a key player in the sectarian conflict in
Iraq, having taken to the streets with extreme vengeance
against Sunni insurgents and civilians after the February
bombing of a Shiite shrine north of Baghdad.
The militias and their death squads are the armed wings of
rival Shiite political parties. One of the militias, known
as the Mahdi Army, is loyal to Al-Sadr; the second, larger
group is known as the Badr Brigade and answers to the SCIRI.
Al-Maliki's hold on power depends on the support of both
political organizations and their fighters, hence his
reluctance to move against the armed groups.
He also has balked at US demands for passage of a series of
laws that would favor minority Sunnis, a group that makes up
the bulk of the insurgency that has been fighting US forces
and has killed tens of thousands of Shiites.
Sunni members of parliament over the past two days have
threatened to walk out of the legislature and take up arms.
They charge the Shiite-dominated government with refusing to
meet their demands for a fair division of power and natural
resources.
The dean of the Sunni politicians in parliament said
Thursday there were attempts by Iran to run Sunnis out of
the country. Adnan Al-Dulaimi then called Arab countries to
support Iraq's Sunni minority.
"There is a Safawi (Iranian) plan to root the Sunnis out of
this country, and we are confronting it," Al-Dulaimi said.
"We call on our Arab brethren to support us and confront
this Safawi plan."
His political group has five ministers in Al-Maliki's
Cabinet and Al-Dulaimi again threatened to pull them out of
the government.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press.
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