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IRAQ WARS
Gunmen kill three Sunni clerics in south Iraq
by Staff Writers
Basra, Iraq (AFP) Jan 02, 2015


Bomb wounds senior Iraqi army officer: officials
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Jan 03, 2015 - A roadside bomb wounded a senior Iraqi army officer Saturday who had successfully commanded a major operation against the Islamic State (IS) group in November, officials said.

The blast hit Staff Lieutenant General Abdulwahab al-Saadi's vehicle north of the militant-held city of Tikrit, wounding him and his driver, an army brigadier general said.

Ahmed al-Krayim, head of the Salaheddin provincial council, said that Saadi, a 55-year-old from southern Iraq who had served in ousted dictator Saddam Hussein's army, was lightly wounded.

Saadi, head of the Salaheddin Operations Command, led the operation in November that retook the strategic town of Baiji, which had been in IS hands for months.

Baiji is the largest town to be recaptured by government forces since IS-led militants overran much of Iraq's Sunni Arab heartland in a sweeping offensive launched in June.

Gunmen shot dead three Sunni clerics in the Shiite-majority southern province of Basra, Iraqi officials said on Friday, an attack likely to increase already-significant sectarian tensions in the country.

Raikan Mahdi, the head of the security committee for Al-Zubair district in Basra province, said "unknown gunmen" killed the clerics and wounded two more.

Mahdi said the attack took place as the clerics headed from provincial capital Basra to Al-Zubair on Thursday night, after attending a meeting on preparations to celebrate the Prophet Mohammed's birthday.

It is still unclear who carried out the killings, which come at a time of heightened tensions between Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority and the Sunni Muslim minority who mark the prophet's birthday on Saturday.

Sunni jihadists from the Islamic State (IS) group spearheaded a sweeping offensive that overran major parts of Iraq and have repeatedly attacked Shiites, whom the consider to be apostates.

Baghdad turned to Shiite militias for support against IS, and while they have played a key role in the fighting, they have also carried out kidnappings and extrajudicial killings targeting Sunnis.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, a Shiite, condemned the Basra killings, saying they were carried out by "terrorist gangs" who must be brought to justice.

Interior Minister Mohammed Ghabban -- a member of the Badr bloc, which is affiliated with one of the country's most powerful Shiite militias -- ordered an investigation into the attack, the ministry said, blaming it on "forces serving the (IS) project."

But Basra is far from IS strongholds, which are located north and west of Baghdad, and parliament speaker Salim al-Juburi, a Sunni, implied that Shiite militiamen were behind the attack.

"We will not allow the replacement of the civil state that we seek to build with a group of warlords and militia leaders," Juburi said in remarks on the killings, according to a statement released by his office.

And the Iraqi Islamic Party, a main Sunni political party of which Juburi is a member, also said the attack was carried out by "criminal militias."

Baghdad's reliance on Shiite militias has helped push back IS but also increased their power to the point that controlling them will be a major challenge for the government.

But the Iraqi government's first priority is the fight against IS, and while pro-government forces have regained some ground, large areas are still outside Baghdad's control.


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