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Iraqi anti-Qaeda militias stripped of gun permits

Five killed, including four police, in Baghdad attacks
Baghdad (AFP) June 6, 2010 - A spate of bomb attacks in and around Baghdad Sunday morning killed five people, including four policemen, and wounded 24 others, security officials said. In the deadliest explosion, a suicide car bomb outside a police station killed four policemen and wounded 12 other police officials in Al-Amil district, in the south of the capital. The blast occurred at around 8:00 am (0500 GMT), officials from the interior and defence ministries said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

And in central Baghdad's Allawi neighbourhood, an electrical engineer was killed when a magnetic "sticky bomb" attached to his car detonated. Two others were wounded in the attack, the interior ministry official said. Two other people were wounded in a roadside bomb targeting a police convoy in Baghdad Jadidah ("New Baghdad" in Arabic), in the west of the city. And in Mahmudiyah, 30 kilometres (18 miles) south of the capital, eight people were wounded in another roadside bomb attack near the town's municipal council offices. Iraqi government figures showed that 337 people were killed as a result of violence in May, the fourth time this year where the overall death toll has been higher than the same month in 2009.
by Staff Writers
Baquba, Iraq (AFP) June 6, 2010
Anti-Qaeda militiamen in the central Iraqi province of Diyala have been stripped of the right to carry weapons, an official said on Sunday, sparking a wave of anger and warnings of unrest.

The latest move comes amid efforts to integrate the Sahwa (Awakening) fighters, who joined with US and Iraqi forces in 2006 and 2007 to turn the tide of Iraq's bloody insurgency, with Iraq's security forces and ministries as part of a deal reached in 2008.

"The ground forces commander, Lieutenant General Ali Ghaidan, ordered the withdrawal of weapons permits from Sahwa members in Diyala," said an official in the province's security command, speaking on condition of anonymity.

"The decision was taken following the arrest of several militants implicated in assassinations."

The official said that 9,837 militiamen in the province were affected by the decision.

However, Zuhair al-Chalabi, a senior Iraqi official responsible for integrating the Sahwa, who are known as the "Sons of Iraq" by the US army, into the security forces and civil service, said that the weapons permits had expired rather than having been withdrawn.

"The Diyala command gave the militiamen special authorisation (to carry arms), and not weapons permits," Chalabi told AFP.

"These authorisations expired and were withdrawn by the command," he added, but declined to specify if they would be renewed.

Chalabi said that the issue only applied to Sahwa members in Diyala, and insisted that there was "no desire (from Iraqi authorities) to deprive them of their arms" nationwide.

The decision to withdraw weapons permits has sparked anger among Sahwa members, whose decision to side with US and Iraqi forces to fight Al-Qaeda and its supporters led to a dramatic fall in violence across the country.

"These weapons are necessary to protect ourselves and to protect the regions under our control," said Khalid al-Samarrai, a Sahwa leader east of Diyala's provincial capital Baquba.

"We will be forced to withdraw to avoid being an easy target for Al-Qaeda if this decision is upheld."

A member of Diyala provincial council also expressed disquiet at the firearm permit withdrawal.

"If the authorisations are taken from the Sahwa, it creates an opening for Al-Qaeda members in the province to attack them," said Assad al-Karkhi, a member of the Islamic Party, a Sunni Arab bloc.

"This decision will create gaps in security in areas controlled by the Sahwa where Al-Qaeda is still present."

Control of the Sahwa passed from the US to Iraq last October and since then, their wages -- said to have been cut from 300 dollars under US leadership to 100 dollars -- have been paid, often late, by the Shiite-led government.

Baghdad has promised to incorporate 20 percent of the Sahwa into the police and military and find civil service jobs for many of the rest.

The US military had expressed concern over the integration process.

A Pentagon report in July 2009 argued: "The slow pace of integration has the potential to undermine Sunni confidence in the GoI (Government of Iraq), and, if not corrected, could undermine security progress."



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IRAQ WARS
Attacks in Iraq down, Al-Qaeda arrests up: US general
Washington (AFP) June 4, 2010
High-profile attacks and casualty figures in Iraq fell in 2010 to their lowest level since the US invasion, while the number of Al-Qaeda leaders captured or killed soared, the US commander in Iraq said Friday. "All of those statistics for the first five months of 2010 are the lowest we've had on record," General Ray Odierno told reporters in Washington. "Although there has been some viol ... read more







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