We’re closer now than ever…”

BAGHDAD — I’ve been talk­ing to some folks today about the polit­i­cal cri­sis, and was struck by a few quotes:

We’re closer now than ever, if we’re not already in civil war, and I don’t know what can stop it now. Except maybe U.S. troops back on the streets.” — senior Coali­tion advi­sor to the Min­istry of Interior.

This is their chance to take the polit­i­cal process hostage.” — from MP Mithal al-Alousi, sec­u­lar politi­cian wor­ried about the Shi’ites using yesterday’s attack to push back against American/Kurdish/Sunni pres­sure to loosen their grip on the levers of power.

We did our best to bring him into the polit­i­cal process.” — head of SCIRI’s polit­i­cal rela­tions com­mit­tee, Redha Jawad Taqi, on Moq­tada al-Sadr. He is con­cerned that mem­bers of par­lia­ment loyal to al-Sadr resorted to threats of vio­lence to get their way in par­lia­ment. “They believe wrong things about democ­racy. We hope they can be taught the rules.”

In other news around Iraq, three jour­nal­ists from al-Arabiyah Tele­vi­sion were killed in Samarra after being kid­napped some time last night. They were cor­re­spon­dent Atwar Bah­jat, cam­era­man Adnan Abdal­lah and sound engi­neer Khalid Muhsin. They were cov­er­ing the attack on the shrine in Samarra.

Today, the office of Moq­tada al-Sadr issued a state­ment denounc­ing the attack on the Askari shrine and blam­ing the gov­ern­ment, the Amer­i­cans and “crusaders.”

Game On?

BAGHDAD — Men dressed as Iraqi police com­man­dos slipped into Samarra’s shrine of “Imam Hasan al-Askari”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasan_al_Askari last night, set explo­sive and “blew it up”:http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060222/ts_nm/iraq_dc this morn­ing, caus­ing the golden dome to col­lapse and with it, hopes for a national unity gov­ern­ment.
(How impor­tant is the Al-Askari shrine? It’s one of the holi­est shrines for Shi’a Mus­lims because Hasan al-Askari is the father of the 12th Imam, or the Mahdi, a messiah-like fig­ure for Mus­lims world-wide. The father’s remains are buried in the Shrine.)
Vio­lent protests are now sweep­ing Iraq. Peo­ple from the pre­dom­i­nantly Shi’ite Shu’lah neigh­bor­hood in west­ern Bagh­dad have attacked Sunni mosques in Ghaz­a­liya, a nearby Sunni area. Sadr City, home base for rebel cleric — and par­lia­men­tary power­bro­ker — Moq­tada al-Sadr, has report­edly re-armed. A Shi’ite mob also report­edly killed a man in the street they said was a Salafist or Wahabbi.
In Bas­rah, there are reports of heavy street fight­ing between Sunni and Shi’ite gun­men, and Sunni polit­i­cal party offices have been attacked. There are reports of attacks on a British and Dan­ish base in Basra, but no reports of casu­al­ties yet.
This all hap­pened when I was in the Green Zone today to inter­view Lt. Gen. Dempsey, com­man­der of the “train­ing command”:http://www.mnstci.iraq.centcom.mil/. He can­celled his inter­view, which baf­fled his poor pub­lic affairs office. He com­mented that what was hap­pen­ing must be really big if Dempsey is can­cel­ing inter­views as he’s usu­ally not involved in the day-to-day war fight­ing details. (“He’s not in the 5-meter knife fight,” the PAO said.) Also, I saw sev­eral Apache heli­copters tak­ing off from the Green Zone, which is also unusual. Usu­ally, it’s Black­hawks that fill the air. Other mil­i­tary source sources have said the Amer­i­cans have scaled back all patrols, espe­cially in Shi’ite neigh­bor­hoods.
If this doesn’t spark a much-feared civil war, we’ll be lucky. This is the tens­est Bagh­dad has been in two years, and this attack is espe­cially provoca­tive com­ing as it does dur­ing “Arba’een”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arba%27een, the 40-day mourn­ing period for “Imam Hussayn”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Husayn_bin_Ali that fol­lows the Shi’ite com­mem­o­ra­tion of “Ashura”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashura.
Of course, Sis­tani might still ride in and save the day — again. We can hope.
But quite apart from all that, this will derail Washington’s hopes for an inclu­sive Iraqi gov­ern­ment that includes Sun­nis in mean­ing­ful posi­tions. The Shi’ite alliance in par­lia­ment is already push­ing back against state­ments made by Amb. Zal­may Khalilzad on Mon­day, in which he said the secu­rity min­istries (Inte­rior and Defense) should go to “peo­ple who are non-sectarian … who do not rep­re­sent or have ties to mili­tias.” (Yeah, he’s talk­ing to you, Badr Corps.) Yes­ter­day, Prime Min­is­ter Ibrahim al-Jaafari fired back and said, in effect, “bug­ger off.”:http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21022006/325/iraq-s-jaafari-rejects-u-s-sectarian-warning.html
“When some­one asks us whether we want a sec­tar­ian gov­ern­ment the answer is ‘No, we do not want a sec­tar­ian government’ — not because the U.S. ambas­sador says so or issues a warn­ing,” he told a news con­fer­ence. “We think that sov­er­eignty means no one inter­feres in our affairs.“
Memo to Prime Min­is­ter: That ship has sailed, _habibi._ I guess inter­fer­ence in inter­nal Iraqi affairs is only OK when you’re the one being installed in power after rid­ing in on the back of an Amer­i­can tank.
Snark aside, today’s attack will mean it will be much, much harder to make the case for includ­ing Sun­nis in the gov­ern­ment, espe­cially if it means giv­ing up any of the impor­tant min­istries. (Maybe the Sun­nis would like the Youth and Sports min­istry? The Olympics are com­ing up in a cou­ple of years.) And even if the Shi’ite coali­tion wanted to include Sun­nis, today’s attack on the shrine will make it very hard to keep their con­stituen­cies loyal if they’re seen as reward­ing “ter­ror­ists,” which many Shi’a now call all Sun­nis.
Also sig­nif­i­cant is that Grand Aya­tol­lah Ali al-Sistani, the most revered Shi’ite in Iraq, called for seven days of mourn­ing and protests — although he urged them to remain peace­ful. I can’t help but won­der, “Is he seri­ous?” This is an emo­tional, volatile time and any protests are likely to turn vio­lent, either from their own accord or through _agent provocateurs_ who might use them as kin­dling for more fire­works.
Out­side now I can hear chant­ing and the occa­sional gun shot. There have been two deep _whumps_ nearby, the sig­na­ture of car bombs. I can hear jets over Bagh­dad. The sit­u­a­tion is tense and every­one is on high alert.
*UPDATES 8:43:35 PM +0300 GMT:* Out­raged demon­stra­tors have burned the Sunni Waqf office in Basra. (The Waqf is the Sunni Endow­ment Board, and is basi­cally a trust set up to take care of Sunni reli­gious prop­er­ties. It’s funded by the gov­ern­ment and has an appointed head. Adnan al-Dulaimi, the head of the largest Sunni coali­tion in par­lia­ment was once head of Iraq’s Sunni Waqf board.)
Large demon­stra­tions are sched­uled for tomor­row at 10 a.m. Yikes.
Moq­tada al-Sadr is hold­ing _takfiris_ (those who call oth­ers infi­dels, i.e., the Salafists and Wahabists), Ba’athists and the “occu­pa­tion” respon­si­ble for the shrine attack. “It was not the Sun­nis who attacked the shrine of imam Al-Hadi, God’s peace be upon him, but rather the occu­pa­tion; the _takfiris_, al-nawasib (a deroga­tory term the Shi­ites use to refer to Sun­nis), God damn them; and the Ba’thists. We should not attack Sunni mosques. I ordered al-Mahdi Army to pro­tect the Shi’ite and Sunni shrines and to show a high sense of respon­si­bil­ity, some­thing they actu­ally did.” Moq­tada has also called for a vote in par­lia­ment on expelling “for­eign forces,” the ras­cal.
Al-Sistani has con­demned the attack on the Askari shrine, but also said — some­what omi­nously — “The Iraqi Gov­ern­ment is expected, now more than any time before, to fully shoul­der its respon­si­bil­i­ties and halt the wave of crim­i­nal acts that tar­get the holy places. If the government’s secu­rity organs are not capa­ble of pro­vid­ing the nec­es­sary pro­tec­tion, the believ­ers are capa­ble of doing so with Almighty God’s assis­tance.” (empha­sis added.) That’s really not good.

Welcome back, habibi

BAGHDAD — Ehlen w’sehlehn, as they say here. (“Wel­come.”) To which I should prob­a­bly reply, “Thanks… I think.” I’m back in Iraq’s cap­i­tal after two and a half months away, and in that time I faced upheavals in my per­sonal life, and three weeks in Beirut. The two are more or less unre­lated. But Bagh­dad is almost exactly the same as when I left, despite the fact that there’s been a mon­u­men­tal elec­tion here — the full import of which has yet to be felt.
Well, it’s not exactly the same. I’ve been back a day and I’ve already received an ear­ful on the high price of petrol: 250 dinars for a liter as opposed to 20 dinars it was in the sum­mer of 2003 and the 30 dinar or so it was when I left in mid-November. Fuel sub­si­dies are being lifted and peo­ple are feel­ing the squeeze.
If only there were fuel for the city’s power sta­tions. Elec­tric­ity is down to about two hours a day in Bagh­dad, doled out in fits and spurts of 15 mins or so at a time. Some­times, glo­ri­ously, we get a solid hour, but it’s rare. Gen­er­a­tors pick up the slack, and since you have ris­ing fuel costs, you start to see the dou­ble squeeze that poor Iraqis are feel­ing.
Add on to that inces­sant guerilla attacks on the country’s oil infra­struc­ture that has left exports _below pre-war levels_ and there’s no money com­ing into the gov­ern­ment. Insur­gents have hit upon pipeline sab­o­tage as a means to cut off Baghdad’s fund­ing, so no mat­ter what the com­po­si­tion of the gov­ern­ment — when it’s finally done — it won’t be able to do much. So the new gov­ern­ment, which is still being nego­ti­ated, will prob­a­bly be viewed with the same resent­ment as the cur­rent Jaa­fari gov­ern­ment does, except we’ll be stuck with these guys for four years now.
Speak­ing of the gov­ern­ment, word is that the United Iraqi Alliance list, dom­i­nated by Shi’ite reli­gious par­ties and thought to have the bless­ings of Grand Aya­tol­lah Ali al-Sistani, is dead­locked over who will be their can­di­date for the prime minister’s office. Ibrahim al-Jaafari, of the Da’wa Party, wants to keep the job, but cur­rent vice pres­i­dent Adel Abdul Mahdi (of the rival SCIRI party) is favored by oth­ers in the coali­tion. The Kurds are will­ing to sup­port who­ever will legal­ize their hold on Kirkuk.
The ques­tion is what will the Sunni groups do. Ally with the UIA in a national unity gov­ern­ment? Cleave to Iyad Allawi’s rump bloc in the hopes of cre­at­ing a viable oppo­si­tion? We’ll see.
The mood here among reporters, I think, is grim. Jill Carroll’s kid­nap­ping is still unre­solved, despite hope­ful rumors of her release soon. Those, so far, have gone unre­al­ized.
I arrived yes­ter­day and today did lit­tle other than get my bear­ings and plan some sto­ries with the other reporters. Tomor­row will be taken up with more logis­tics and media cre­den­tialling busi­ness. Wednes­day, I sit down in the Sad­dam Cir­cus, or should I say, “Trial.“
On the way in from the air­port yes­ter­day, I counted more mar­riage con­voys than I had in months (three.) Why? Because tomor­row is the start of the Islamic new year and the begin­ning of _Muharram ul Haram_, the month in which reli­gious Shi’ites refrain from mar­riage or other cel­e­bra­tions. (It must suck to have your birth­day this month.) So, every­one was try­ing to get their last-minute wed­ding plans in. In 10 days, we’ll be faced with Ashu­rah, the mark­ing of the mar­tyr­dom of Imam Hus­sein. Iraq’s Shi’ites in Najaf and, espe­cially, Kar­bala, mark it with bloody parades in which they beat, cut and fla­gel­late them­selves in a sign of grief for the death of Hus­sein. It’s going to be a tense month, for while fight­ing is gen­er­ally frowned upon dur­ing this month, Salafist/Wahabi Mus­lims con­sider the Umayyed Caliph Yazid, who sent the army that killed Hus­sein and his fol­low­ers, a right­eous fig­ure while Shi’ites nat­u­rally detest him. In other words, the poten­tial for vio­lence is high.
Yes, Bagh­dad is the same as always. As the tagline to “Jar­head” goes, “Wel­come to the Suck.”

Quiet Election Day; Sunnis Show Up

Woman voter

A woman exits the Ayoon al-Maha Nurs­ery School, in the Jadhriyah neigh­bor­hood, a mostly Shi’ite area in Bagh­dad. Copy­right 2005 Yas­sar al-Ali

BAGHDAD — Well, well… The Sun­nis might sur­prise us all on this one.
If you’re a reg­u­lar reader of this blog, both of you, that means you know (“from other sources”:http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1118269,00.html) there was a ref­er­en­dum yes­ter­day. With none of the gid­di­ness of Jan­u­ary, but all the secu­rity, Iraqis voted for the sec­ond time this year, this time on the pro­posed per­ma­nent Iraqi con­sti­tu­tion. It’s a doc­u­ment sup­port­ers say will secure the country’s future and unite the coun­try while oppo­nents say it will lead to dis­so­lu­tion and civil war.
Con­sid­er­ing the sec­tar­ian divi­sions on dis­play between Iraq’s Shi’ites and Sun­nis, it’s unsur­pris­ing issues of reli­gion and national iden­tity are what decides people’s vote. What is sur­pris­ing is the num­bers that Sun­nis showed up.
Shi’ites over­whelm­ingly sup­port the doc­u­ment, in part because of the instruc­tions from the pow­er­ful Shi’ite cler­i­cal body, the _merjariya_, led by the ven­er­ated Grand Aya­tol­lah Ali al-Sistani. He called for a “yes” vote on the doc­u­ment. Most Sun­nis, how­ever, say it’s a ter­ri­ble con­sti­tu­tion and bad for Iraq.
“We are fol­low­ing our supreme _merja_, Sis­tani,” said Jafar al-Khazali, a 29-year-old day laborer as his daugh­ter, Sou’ad, clung to his leg. “I will not lose my rights again like before.“
“This is bad for the Iraqis,” coun­ters Saleh Mut­laq, an influ­en­tial mem­ber of the National Dia­logue Coun­cil, a Sunni group which includes many for­mer Ba’athists. “This con­sti­tu­tion will break up this coun­try.“
Under the for­mer regime of Sad­dam Hus­sein, Shi’ites were often dis­crim­i­nated against and oppressed while Sis­tani was under vir­tual house arrest. The con­sti­tu­tion, writ­ten largely by Shi’ites installed in power by the United States, would secur­ing their place as the country’s new rulers. With 60 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion, demo­graph­ics trans­late into polit­i­cal des­tiny.
Fur­ther cement­ing their power, the document’s fed­er­al­ism pro­vi­sions, bit­terly opposed by most Sunni politi­cians, would allow the for­ma­tion of pow­er­ful regions — mini-states, in effect — with con­trol of Iraq’s future oil wealth and the abil­ity to ignore the cen­tral gov­ern­ment in Bagh­dad. Sun­nis say this will lead to the breakup of Iraq, with oil-rich regions in the Kur­dish north and Shi’ite south and a bar­ren desert for Sun­nis in the mid­dle.
But back to yes­ter­day. The giddy enthu­si­asm of the Jan­u­ary elec­tions, in which Iraqis voted in rel­a­tively free elec­tions for the first time in their his­tory, was absent, and instead an air of res­ig­na­tion was felt. Rather than hang around the polling places gos­sip­ing, as they did nine months ago, Iraqis came, voted and left quickly. There were fewer chil­dren out with par­ents, too, indi­cat­ing a height­ened sense of the dan­gers present on the empty streets.
Bagh­dad was rel­a­tively calm, despite vio­lence in the last 19 days that killed more than 450 Iraqi civil­ians. Saturday’s quiet could indi­cate that the dra­con­ian secu­rity mea­sures that banned almost all vehic­u­lar traf­fic, inter­na­tional travel and move­ment between provinces were effec­tive in curb­ing insur­gents’ attacks. Or it might mean the insur­gents just decided to keep their pow­der dry until a more polit­i­cally oppor­tune time. The night before the vote, insur­gents sab­o­taged an elec­tri­cal tower, plung­ing the city and north­ern towns into dark­ness, and there were reports of gun bat­tles between insur­gents and com­bined U.S. and Iraqi troops in Ramadi. In Abu Ghraib, police sources said insur­gents had attacked a polling place, killed the super­vi­sor and made off with five bal­lot boxes. Despite all that, the vio­lence was much less intense than on Jan. 30, which saw more than 100 attacks, includ­ing sui­cide bomb­ings, killing at least 40 peo­ple.
Because of the secu­rity restrictions,I was unable to visit Sunni neigh­bor­hoods where atti­tudes toward the con­sti­tu­tion dif­fered. Res­i­dents of these areas, reached by phone said there were many peo­ple in the streets all ready to vote against the con­sti­tu­tion, but this could not be inde­pen­dently con­firmed. I was able to walk to nearby polling areas with no prob­lem, but they’re all Shi’ite neigh­bor­hoods, and the response is pretty much what you’d expect: They love the con­sti­tu­tion, love Sis­tani and believe all Iraqis are broth­ers and love one another.
Excuse me while I sing “Kum­baya” with my Iraqi hip­pie broth­ers.
The Sun­nis I reached, how­ever, say — again — exactly what you’d expect them to: This is ter­ri­ble and bad for Iraq. Oh, and by the way, screw the Ira­ni­ans, er, Shi’ites. Broth­ers, our col­lec­tive asses.
Thafir Aga, 38, a taxi dri­ver and Sunni in the Sadiya neigh­bor­hood, said he voted against the con­sti­tu­tion because “This con­sti­tu­tion is divid­ing Iraq,” he said. “The gov­ern­ment is only Kur­dish and Iran­ian, it is not a Sunni or Shi’ite gov­ern­ment.” Many Sun­nis, who ben­e­fited under Saddam’s reign, regard the Shi’ites in gov­ern­ment as pawns of Iran because politi­cians such as Prime Min­is­ter Ibrahim al-Jaafari spent the war in exile there.
Aga also had lit­tle faith in a fair vote and said the gov­ern­ment would fix the elec­tion in its favor. “They just want to let the peo­ple feel they are prac­tic­ing democ­racy,” he said. “Peo­ple in the gov­ern­ment are just instru­ments for Amer­ica and Israel. If I accept this con­sti­tu­tion, then I will be like them.” He added that the con­sti­tu­tion was un-Islamic and against Iraq tra­di­tions because it was cre­ated under for­eign occu­pa­tion.
A neigh­bor, Mustafa Hamdi, a 35-year-old bar­ber also rejected he doc­u­ment. “They imported this con­sti­tu­tion from abroad,” he said. “This is only for Kurds and other par­ties,” mean­ing Iran.
How­ever, the Sun­nis seem to have come out in droves in sev­eral swing provinces, such as Nin­eveh, and there’s a real chance this might go down to the wire. Anbar and Sala­hadin provinces — con­tain­ing the cities of Fal­lu­jah and Tikrit, Saddam’s home­town, respec­tively — will almost cer­tainly vote against the doc­u­ment. But Ninevah is home to Mosul, a mixed city of about 2 mil­lion Sunni Arabs and Kurds. If the Kurds stayed home out of com­pla­cency — and I’m hear­ing that Kur­dish and Shi’ite par­tic­i­pa­tion was lower than expected — the Sun­nis might just pull off a huge upset.
That will change every­thing. The Sis­tani coali­tion, made up of mainly of reli­gious Shi’ite par­ties, will be crack apart. The sec­u­lar par­ties involved, includ­ing Ahmad Chalabi’s Iraqi National Con­gress, will split off. One pos­si­bil­ity is to see them ally with for­mer Prime Min­is­ter Iyad Allawi and the National Dia­logue Coun­cil, who are seek­ing an alliance to run for elec­tions in Decem­ber. The reli­gious par­ties will be unable to go to the vot­ers with a sin­gle accom­plish­ment. They haven’t deliv­ered power, water or secu­rity. The econ­omy is still in sham­bles and unem­ploy­ment is high. If the con­sti­tu­tion passes, at least they’ll be able to say to their con­stituents, “At least we secured our seat of power and put the Sun­nis in their place.” If it doesn’t, what can they offer?
On the Sun­nis side, you’ll see newly resur­gent polit­i­cal groups — and the end of the Iraqi Islamic Party, which sup­ported a “last-minute deal”:http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1116781,00.html to amend the con­sti­tu­tion after the elec­tion of a per­ma­nent Assem­bly in Decem­ber. For­merly united with the National Dia­logue Coun­cil and the Asso­ci­a­tion of Mus­lim Schol­ars opposed it, the IIP switched last week with the announce­ment of the deal and called for its peo­ple to sup­port it. If the con­sti­tu­tion fails because of Sunni “no” votes, that will show the IIP to be tooth­less and it will lose sup­port. The Asso­ci­a­tion of Mus­lim Schol­ars, at the same time, will be shown to have the real juice among the Sun­nis, as it has been a long-time oppo­nent of the inva­sion, the occu­pa­tion, the Iraqi gov­ern­ment and the con­sti­tu­tion. The National Dia­logue Coun­cil is fairly new, and will also ben­e­fit, but from what I’m hear­ing it was the Sunni mosques, not the sec­u­lar­ists of the NDC, that got the vote out.
As for the Amer­i­cans, they’ll have a a new polit­i­cal real­ity to deal with. The AMS has deep ties to the insur­gency, and a no vote and infu­sion of polit­i­cal cap­i­tal will, iron­i­cally, allow the Amer­i­cans to start deal­ing seri­ously with the Asso­ci­a­tion — and thus, the insur­gency. That could actu­ally be the start of peace talks.
If the con­sti­tu­tion wins deci­sively, how­ever, the Sun­nis will grum­ble but likely work within the sys­tem. Sunni mem­bers of the con­sti­tu­tional com­mit­tee, from Fal­lu­jah no less, have said as such. They promised to run a slate of can­di­dates that can actively shape the con­sti­tu­tion when it’s up for amend­ments in April.
The absolute worst-case sce­nario is if the Sun­nis come close to defeat­ing the con­sti­tu­tion, but fail. There will be accu­sa­tions of vote-rigging and any polit­i­cal momen­tum the Sun­nis felt was mov­ing their way will be spent. The Shi’ites will have con­sol­i­dated their power and those Sun­nis on the fence might be moved into active oppo­si­tion. The insur­gency might even worsen, if such things are pos­si­ble, or a close vote might be the trig­ger for “open civil war”:http://www.back-to-iraq.com/archives/2005/09/civil_war_is_he.php.
So, it will def­i­nitely be inter­est­ing to watch the results come in. So far, we’re hear­ing noth­ing but rumors. They range from the intrigu­ing — I heard that the polling sta­tions in the Green Zone, the seat the Iraqi Gov­ern­ment, went over­whelm­ingly against the con­sti­tu­tion; make of that what you will — to the absurd: Al-Firat, an Iran­ian chan­nel, is report­ing that instead of vot­ing “no,” Sala­hadin province, con­tain­ing Tikrit, voted 75 per­cent in favor of the con­sti­tu­tion. If that result turns out to be true, there will be no doubt the vote was fixed, and in a stu­pidly clumsy man­ner.
I do think that defeat­ing the con­sti­tu­tion might be best in the long run. It will embolden the Sun­nis and give them a polit­i­cal win, moti­vat­ing them to fur­ther involve them­selves in the polit­i­cal process. This will force the Shi’ites and Kurds to deal with real elected rep­re­sen­ta­tives instead of appointed ones. Will this spell and end to vio­lence? Of course not, but any­thing that allows the Sun­nis to claim vic­tory instead of forc­ing them to eat polit­i­cal table scraps is a big step in end­ing the Sunni-led insurgency.

What Horror…

BEIRUT — While the world watches New Orleans drown, Bagh­dad has seen the sin­gle great­est loss of life when thou­sands of Shi’ite pil­grims “pan­icked on a bridge”:http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050831/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq over the Tigris and stam­peded after rumors flew among the crowd that two sui­cide bombers were in the midst.
Almost 650 peo­ple are dead and hun­dreds wounded. They drowned in the river and suf­fo­cated on land.

We were on the bridge. It was so crowded. Thou­sands of peo­ple were sur­round­ing me,” said sur­vivor Fad­hel Ali, 28, bare­foot and soak­ing wet after swim­ming in the river. “We heard that a sui­cide attacker was among the crowd. Every­body was yelling so I jumped from the bridge into the river, swam and reached the bank. I saw women, chil­dren and old men falling after me into the water.“
Health Min­is­ter Abdul-Mutalib Mohammed told state-run Iraqiya tele­vi­sion that there were “huge crowds on the bridge and the dis­as­ter hap­pened when some­one shouted that there is a sui­cide bomber on the bridge.“
“This led to a state of panic among the pil­grims and they started to push each other and there was many cases of suf­fo­ca­tion,” he said.

Just hor­ri­ble. I don’t have any words for this, but the Iraqis don’t deserve this. They’ve been through so much already.
I’ll be back in Bagh­dad next week.

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