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IRAQ WARS
Iraqis angry over Abu Ghraib ringleader's release
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 7, 2011

Eight killed in Iraq violence
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 7, 2011 - Insurgents killed at least six people in a bomb attack on the home of a Shiite family in a mainly Sunni town south of Baghdad on Sunday, part of nationwide violence that left a total of eight dead.

The blast, which occurred in the early morning, also badly damaged a neighbouring home in Iskandiriyah, which lies within a confessionally mixed area known as the Triangle of Death because of frequent attacks since the 2003 US-led invasion.

Mohammed al-Shammari, a doctor at the main hospital in the nearby city of Hilla, said six people were killed and 11 others were wounded in the explosion.

Among the injured were women and children, he said. The wounded included four who were badly hurt.

A police lieutenant in Iskandiriyah also put the toll at six dead, including two children, and six wounded.

The family whose house was bombed were members of the Shiite Al-Massudi tribe, he said.

Two separate attacks south of the disputed northern oil city of Kirkuk, meanwhile, left one anti-Qaeda militiaman dead and two people wounded, local police said.

And in the restive central province of Diyala, an Iraqi soldier was gunned down in front of his home in the town of Khales, and two people were wounded by a roadside bomb in the provincial capital Baquba, an army officer said.

Violence in Iraq has declined from its peak in 2006 and 2007 but attacks remain common. A total of 259 Iraqis were killed in attacks in July, the second-highest monthly figure for 2011.

Iraqis on Sunday expressed anger at the release of the ringleader of US guards who abused detainees at Abu Ghraib prison, and said US troops should not be granted further immunity from Iraqi prosecution.

Charles Graner, 42, was on Saturday freed on parole from the US Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas after serving over six and a half years of a 10-year sentence, US army spokeswoman Rebecca Steed told AFP, saying he was released early for good conduct and through work rehabilitation programmes.

In Baghdad, residents slammed the decision and said they opposed the extension of immunity from Iraqi justice for any US soldiers who remain in the country on a training mission being discussed for after the end of this year -- a condition insisted upon by American officials.

"This is an unjust decision," said Wael Safah Jassem, a 23-year-old shop-owner with close-cropped hair. "Anyone who committed such crimes should not be freed" so easily.

He added that if US troops remain in Iraq past the end of the year, "it is wrong for them to have immunity."

Iraqi leaders have agreed to talks with the United States on a possible extension of its troop presence, but a decision has not yet been made.

US troops have had immunity under Iraqi law since the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, leaving soldiers such as Graner and others who have committed abuses or even murder subject only to US prosecution.

"The criminal who was released ... should be brought to an Iraqi court to be judged," said Anwar Hamud, a 41-year-old government employee with a bushy moustache, who gestured angrily as he spoke.

"He should be executed for his crime in Abu Ghraib," he said.

"They should not have any immunity," he said when asked about the possible extension of the policy for US troops. "If we give them immunity, that means nothing has changed; they will commit other crimes."

"The immunity in Iraq should be cancelled, as should their presence here," he said. "Iraq should have full sovereignty."

Graner led a six-member team of prison guards who sexually humiliated naked prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad in a scandal that dealt a severe blow to the US's reputation after it came to light in 2004.

Photographs taken by the guards and obtained by the media showed US soldiers grinning as they posed next to detainees held on a leash or stacked in a pyramid.

Others showed the detainees forced into stress positions, their heads covered in a black hood, or being threatened by attack dogs.

"Why did they release him? The criminal should be punished," regardless of his nationality, said Reem Hadi, who has worked as a teacher but said she has been unsuccessfully trying to find a job for years.

"We reject immunity being given to US soldiers if they stay," said the 42-year-old, who wore a tan hijab and sunglasses, adding "many people were hurt because of that immunity."

"They have immunity, and they are killing and arresting everywhere -- is that just?" she asked. "Would US citizens accept such things?"

"I don't want them to stay any more."




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Iraq's Sadr warns against post-2011 US presence
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) Aug 7, 2011 - Radical anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr warned that any US training mission in Iraq after 2011 would amount to an occupation force and need to be opposed by "military means," in a letter seen on Sunday.

The letter, released on Saturday in the Shiite cleric's base in the shrine city of Najaf, came after Baghdad agreed to open talks with Washington for a training mission post-2011, when all US troops are due to have left.

"We will treat anyone who stays in Iraq as an oppressive occupier that should be resisted through military means," Sadr, who divides his time between Iran and Najaf, said in a letter released by his office.

"The government that agrees to their stay, even if it is for training, is a weak government."

In another letter released by his office on Sunday, he said that "we should stand together to reject the presence of the infidel occupier and the armies of darkness, and we refuse any presence of bases or trainers."

His movement issued a code of conduct to followers last month stating they must consider "as enemies only the United States, Britain and Israel, and take into account that military resistance should be conducted by specialists."

Sadr's remarks come after Iraqi political leaders agreed on Wednesday to start negotiations with Washington on a US military mission to train Iraqi security forces.

Unresolved issues remain over the size of the force, the duration of its stay, and whether its members would enjoy immunity from prosecution.

About 47,000 US troops are still stationed in Iraq, all of whom must leave by the end of the year under the terms of a 2008 bilateral security pact, which would remain in force if a training deal is not agreed.

US and Iraqi military officials assess Iraq's security forces capable of maintaining internal security, but say the country is lacking in terms of capacity to defend its borders, airspace and territorial waters.

Sadr's movement has 40 deputies in parliament and seven ministers in Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's national unity government.

And before it was disbanded in 2008, Sadr's Mahdi Army numbered some 60,000 fighters with fierce loyalty to the cleric. It fought bloody battles with the US army in the years following the 2003 invasion which ousted Saddam Hussein.

On July 10, Sadr said he would not revive the Mahdi Army, complaining it had been infested with "criminals."





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IRAQ WARS
Kirkuk joint 'Golden Lions' face uncertain future
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Aug 7, 2011
Iraqi leaders have trumpeted a joint Arab-Kurdish "Golden Lions" security unit in the disputed northern city of Kirkuk but key issues remain over its funding and expansion. American troops, who were key to the force's formation in early 2010, have taken a back seat in the combined unit's operations ahead of the planned year-end US pullout. Senior American officers have voiced concern tha ... read more


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