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Head of Iraq anti-Baath committee gunned down

Ali al-Lami. File image courtesy AFP.

Thousands rally in Baghdad against US presence
Baghdad (AFP) May 26, 2011 - Thousands of followers of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr staged a mass rally in Baghdad on Thursday against US forces, as Iraqi leaders consider asking for an extended American troop presence. The demonstration comes with just months to go before US forces must withdraw from Iraq, but senior American officials have said they hope Iraqi leaders will ask for troops to stay, while acknowledging the unpopularity of the soldiers. At the protest in the mostly Shiite north Baghdad neighbourhood of Sadr City, named after father of the anti-US cleric, several groups of tightly-disciplined demonstrators wearing identical t-shirts emblazoned with Iraqi flags paraded in unison. Waves of men clad in black trousers and caps bearing the words "I am Iraqi", marched in military-style formation, while others in the rally set fire to American and Israeli flags.

"We will not accept even one American soldier staying," said Adnan al-Mussawi, one of the demonstrators. "Occupation has not benefited us at all, it is our religious duty to kick out every American soldier." The demonstrators numbered several thousand according to an AFP estimate, but an official in the Sadrist headquarters in the southern Shiite city of Najaf said 100,000 were attending. The office said the cleric arrived at the rally in a convoy of vehicles with the intention of delivering a speech, but was unable to get out because a mob of supporters flocked to his car. An AFP journalist said a convoy of dozens of SUVs and pick-up trucks arrived at the demonstration, but could not confirm the Sadrist account in full.

Several protesters, who varied in age and in social class from the poor to heads of tribes, shouted slogans ranging from "No to the occupation!" to "The people want the occupier to leave!", referring to the widely held view of the US military as an occupying force in Iraq. Some 45,000 American troops remain in Iraq, primarily tasked with training and equipping their Iraqi counterparts, although they must all withdraw by the end of the year under the terms of a bilateral security pact. Earlier this month, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki called for a national dialogue to gauge whether they should stay beyond 2011, and US Defence Secretary Robert Gates said on Tuesday that he hopes Iraqi leaders will ask US troops to stay beyond the deadline.

Acknowledging that American troops remain unpopular in Iraq, eight years after the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, Gates said: "All I can say is that from the standpoint of Iraq's future but also our role in the region, I hope they figure out a way to ask." Sadr, however, last month threatened to reactivate his feared Mahdi Army militia if the US troop presence were extended. "We say to the Americans, you should get out," said Awouda al-Fartousi, a tribal leader. "This is a peaceful protest, but if the Americans don't leave our country, we will pick up our guns. There should be a military and cultural resistance."
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) May 26, 2011
The head of Iraq's controversial anti-Baath committee was gunned down while on his way home in Baghdad on Thursday, while nine other policemen and soldiers were killed in nationwide unrest.

Ali al-Lami, the executive director of the Justice and Accountability Commission (JAC), was shot dead by gunmen using silenced pistols while in his car on his way home in east Baghdad, a colleague and security officials said.

"Yes, it's true," Entifadh Qanbar, a friend who ran with Lami on the same political slate in a March 2010 parliamentary election, told AFP.

"He was going from Palestine Street to his house in east Baghdad. His brother was driving. He was followed carefully by a car, then he was intercepted.

"He was shot in the head with silenced pistols, and pronounced dead in the hospital about 20 minutes after that, at 8:00 pm (1700 GMT) tonight."

Qanbar described the murder as "a very well-planned operation," noting that Lami's brother escaped unharmed.

An interior ministry official and a senior counter-terrorism officer, both speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the murder.

Ali Saif Hamad al-Lami, born in Baghdad in 1964, refused to join now executed president Saddam Hussein's Baath party during the dictator's rule, and told AFP in February 2010 that he was detained by the regime several times before it was overthrown in a 2003 US-led invasion.

He was arrested after an aborted post-war revolt by Shiites against Saddam's Sunni-dominated regime in 1991, and again after mourning ceremonies for revered Shiite cleric Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, when he said he was held for three years.

Lami held bachelor's and master's degrees in Mathematics, and is survived by a wife and six children.

The JAC that he headed from February 2004 banned several hundred would-be MPs from taking part in Iraq's March 7, 2010 parliamentary election over their alleged ties to Saddam's party.

The body came in for sharp criticism over its membership -- Lami and chairman Ahmed Chalabi both ran for parliament on the Iraqi National Alliance slate, along with Qanbar. Lami and Qanbar were unsuccessful, but Chalabi is now an MP.

The row over the bans and the apparent conflict of interest dominated the election campaign, raising questions about the JAC's legal status and the ultimate fairness of the vote.

The process also heightened political tensions in a country which was engulfed by deadly sectarian violence in 2006 and 2007. Iraq's government said last year that it was looking to reform and reconstitute the committee.

Meanwhile, in separate violence in and around Baghdad and in central Iraq on Thursday, nine soldiers and policemen were killed in several attacks, security officials said.

In the town of Garma, close to the former Sunni rebel bastion of Fallujah, a roadside bomb struck a car carrying three senior policemen, killing all three, according to a police official in Fallujah, west of Baghdad.

Of the three -- Lieutenant Colonel Khalaf Abbas, Lieutenant Colonel Dalaf Rashid and Captain Saif Mohsen -- Abbas was well-known for carrying out operations against Al-Qaeda.

The car's driver was also seriously wounded in the attack.

Fallujah was the site of fierce fighting in 2004 between US forces and Sunni insurgents, and has long been a rebel bastion, though the area, and Iraq more broadly, has seen a dramatic drop in violence in recent years.

And in the central Iraqi city of Samarra, a roadside bomb targeting a police patrol killed three policemen and wounded another, the provincial operations command said.

In the nearby town of Abu Ghraib, just west of Baghdad, a suicide bomber detonated his explosives vest near an army patrol, killing two soldiers and wounding 13 other people, an interior ministry official said.

And in the capital, police Colonel Khader Mohammed was shot dead by gunmen using silenced pistols in the Al-Ghadir neighbourhood of central Baghdad, the official added.

Violence in Iraq is significantly less than in 2006 and 2007 during a brutal sectarian war, but attacks remain common. A total of 211 people were killed in violence in April, according to official figures.



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