Monday, August 09, 2004


Posted here Monday, August 09, 2004 at 4:51:19 PM    

The situation in Iraq has the following  elements:

  • The central government appoointed by the US tending towards a Bathist revival, led by Allawi.
  • An oppostion led by al-Sadr that is against the US and also against the interim government.
  • On the side with Chalabi, once US info conduit, now head of Saddham trial, but now accused of Murder by Iraq Judge with a warrant.

hence the situation is back on track with an emerging saddham like regime and a religious opposition.

Muqtada al-Sadr, Religious Leader / Political Figure

  • Born: 1973 (?)
  • Birthplace: Iraq
  • Best Known As: Fiery young anti-U.S. cleric in post-Hussein Iraq

Muqtada al-Sadr is a fundamentalist Shiite cleric who has opposed U.S. and British operations in Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003. Though al-Sadr was quite young at the time of Saddam's fall -- he claimed to be 30 -- he came from a powerful clerical lineage: according to the Council on Foreign Relations, "His father, the Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, was the most powerful Shiite cleric in Iraq in the late 1990s. His uncle, Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr, was a leading Shiite activist before his execution by Saddam Hussein's forces in 1980." (Though Shiites make up the majority of Iraq's population, under Hussein the minority Sunni Muslims dominated the Iraqi government.) Mohammad Sadiq al-Sadr was murdered in 1999 by agents of Hussein, at which time Muqtada al-Sadr went underground with some followers of his father. They emerged after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and al-Sadr quickly became a vocal critic of the allied forces and of President George W. Bush. He formed a militia, the so-called Imam Mehdi Army, which provided the military muscle to back up his statements. In April of 2004, after violent uprisings were blamed on al-Sadr and his followers, the United States announced its intention to arrest al-Sadr for complicity in the murder of a rival cleric, Abdel Majid al-Khoei, in April of 2003.

Al-Sadr claimed to be age 30 in 2003, but some sources insist he is actually several years younger; Time magazine said in 2004 that "many of his associates admit [al-Sadr] is more likely 23."

 


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Posted here Monday, August 09, 2004 at 3:59:21 PM    

Details on religion in Iraq.

from http://www.counterpunch.org/ for aug 9

The Attraction of the Ba'athist State
Why Iraqi Christians are Moving to Syria
By GARY LEUPP
4000 Families
The recent spate of attacks on Christian churches in Iraq is symptomatic of the general insecurity that Christians (about three percent of the population, around 800,000 people) face in the occupied country. The interim constitution states that "Islam is the official religion of the State and is to be considered a source of legislation" and while recognizing religious freedom "respects the Islamic identity of the majority of the Iraqi people." For some, Islamic identity means the imposition of Muslim morality. In Sadr City, the Mahdi militia is shutting down Christian-owned liquor shops. Some shop owners have been killed, some Christian women attacked for appearing in public inappropriately attired. Others have been attacked because of a widespread belief that Christians are abetting the occupation.
The irony here, of course, is that Saddam's Iraq was a secular state, ruled by the Baath Party. The Iraqi regime, although suspicious of and sometimes brutal towards the Shiite majority, supported Shiite and Sunni mosques, Assyrian and Chaldean Christian churches, and even the sparsely attended Baghdad synagogue, while forbidding proselytization in general. Saddam appointed Tariq Aziz, a Christian, to top posts; in response, enraged Islamists tried to assassinate Aziz in 1980. Osama bin Laden hated Saddam's Iraq for its specifically non-Islamic character. Now with the fall of the Baath regime, Islamic fundamentalists (of various types) have been unleashed to redefine the role of religion in the country. The U.S. occupation officially dissolved the huge Baath Party, purged Baathists from their posts (including those in medicine and education) and officially approved the wording of the constitution, while creating the power vacuum in which numerous Islamic militias now thrive.

 


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