From the Los Angeles Times
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
Death's at the Door in Iraq
The
massacre in Jihad was efficient. Someone in uniform with a list of
names. A son taken. On the street, gunfire. At home, calls for help.
By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer
July 23, 2006
BAGHDAD — The uniformed gunmen knocked politely on Hamid Shammari's
door.
They
took away his 20-year-old son, promising to let him go the next day. He
hasn't been seen or heard from since that dreadful Sunday that changed
the Jihad neighborhood of western Baghdad, and perhaps the rest of Iraq.
For
several hours on the morning of July 9, Jihad became a place of
unspeakable brutality, not so much for the wanton bloodshed that has
become a daily part of Iraqi life, but for the systematic nature of the
killings. At least 36 and possibly as many as 55 Sunni Arab men were
executed in what appears to have been a revenge operation condoned or
even overseen by law enforcement officials.
The shooting began
early, in ferocious barrages that shook the neighborhood. Shiite youths
acting in apparent collaboration with police officials cordoned off the
area with barbed wire. Gunmen stood guard at checkpoints and prevented
many from leaving. And later, men in police uniforms went door-to-door
holding lists of names.
Witnesses say the Jihad massacre, which
many Iraqis consider a disquieting watershed in the country's descent
into an undeclared civil war between Shiite and Sunni Muslim factions,
was carried out with clocklike precision as residents cowered in their
homes making panicked cellphone calls to U.S. security forces, the
Iraqi equivalent of 911 and, in one case, a commander in a Shiite
militia.
Iraq's Interior Ministry vehemently denies that police
took part in the slayings. One ranking official, speaking on condition
he not be named, said police commandos rushed to Jihad that day and
restored order as "violence broke out among civilians." The U.S.
military also defended its role, saying it responded as soon as Iraqi
police said it was needed.
Authorities did not act until 2 1/2
to four hours after the operation started, residents contend. The few
hours were all the assailants needed. With shocking speed, lives built
up over decades came crashing down, and a neighborhood was crushed
within the grinding gears of Iraq's sectarian war.
Jihad
was a desolate wasteland along the west Baghdad road to the
international airport until a few decades ago, when the government
began selling the land cheaply. With a 1-year-old daughter and a son on
the way, Shammari cobbled together his savings 20 years ago and plunked
it down on a plot of land in a neighborhood named "Holy War."
A new sewage system was put in place, attracting doctors and other
well-to-do folks to the area. The neighborhood's schools were spacious,
with large, well-appointed classrooms that drew educated Iraqi families
keen on bright futures for their children. The neighbors were "all part
of one family," said Shammari, a 53-year-old Sunni Arab schoolteacher
and engineer.
"All afternoon, we spent time in the streets,
playing and having fun with our friends," said Lina Nader, a
25-year-old secretary who moved to the neighborhood when she was a
child. "We were roaming through the area in groups on bicycles."
But tensions always existed between the Sunnis in Jihad and the poorer,
mostly Shiite residents in the adjacent Furat neighborhood, as well as
the wealthier intelligence officers for Saddam Hussein who were moving
in. As sanctions wore the country down in the 1990s, the Jihad enclave
became mixed, with Shiites moving into the Sunni areas and vice versa.
Phone
lines were destroyed in the U.S. bombing campaign three years ago, and
were never fully restored, further cutting the district off from the
rest of the capital. As the Sunni rebellion lunged into Baghdad from
western cities, Jihad was considered a potential haven for insurgents
and found itself in the line of fire as a frequent target of U.S.
military operations.
Yet the real troubles between Sunnis and
Shiites in Jihad began only four months ago, said Yacoub Youssef, the
city councilman whose district includes Jihad.
A Shiite would
get killed. A Sunni would get killed. A car would blow up in front of a
Shiite mosque. A pair of Sunnis would get abducted and be found later,
with bullet holes to the skull and bearing signs of torture.
The
situation began deteriorating rapidly about a month ago, residents say.
Shammari recalled how a Shiite cigarette vendor was shot to death,
followed quickly by the slayings of a Sunni owner of a generator shop
and a Shiite barber, who was gunned down along with several customers
in his salon. A Sunni butcher was killed. His tribesmen retaliated by
killing a number of suspected Shiite militiamen.
"Still, it was semi-calm," Shammari recalled. "You could move around
the streets. It was possible to stay out until 8:30 p.m."
But
the tit-for-tat killings continued to escalate. A car bomb struck a
checkpoint of the Shiite-dominated police commando force July 2,
killing five. On July 7, a car bomb exploded near the Fakhri Shanshal
Mosque during Friday prayers at that Sunni house of worship. Five
people were killed, including two children, police and the U.S.
military said.
The next night, another car bomb went off, this
time in front of the Zahra Hosseiniyeh Mosque, a Shiite house of
worship, as evening prayers ended shortly before 9 p.m. The bombing
killed 12 Iraqis and wounded 18 others, according to a U.S. military
report.
Soon afterward, the U.S. military reported hearing celebratory gunfire
near a Sunni mosque in the area.
As early as 7 a.m. the next day, the counterattack began, residents
said.
"We
heard the firing from the street behind our house," said Mais Haithem
Sheikhly, a 22-year-old graduate student. "We heard a woman shouting
and screaming."
At 8 a.m., Russool Fehed, a 23-year-old employee
at the Ministry of Youth and Sports, began her seven-minute walk to the
bus stop. Young men roaming side streets advised her to go back home,
but she continued. She quickly boarded a minibus and peered through the
window.
Across the intersection, a group of gunmen emerged
from another minibus and began spreading out on the streets. Then she
saw three bodies on the road. "I saw them with my own eyes," she said.
Shammari
left the house at 8:30 a.m. to line up for gasoline for his car. He was
stopped immediately by young men who had set up a roadblock at the end
of his street. They told him to go home. He assumed there had been an
attack on police commandos, who often deputized local teenagers to
block off the streets. He noticed that they had placed barbed wire
around the neighborhood.
"They were neighborhood kids," he said. "They were Shiites. I know the
faces, but I don't know the names."
Another
Jihad resident, who asked that his name not be used, said the
checkpoints were set up at 500-yard intervals, with Shiite militiamen
blocking off intersections and checking identification cards for given
names and tribal affiliations that denote Sunnis.
Back at home,
Shammari heard gunfire. Some minutes later, he again tried to leave the
neighborhood, this time taking his two oldest daughters along.
He
made it to the local bus station, where he spotted a group of gunmen in
their early 20s, again men he recognized as locals. They pulled nine
young men out of a bus. The gunmen lined them up and shot them dead.
"I know the faces, but I don't know the names," he repeated. "They
killed them in front of my eyes."
He rushed back home. "I was afraid they would kill me and my
daughters," he said.
Families
hunkered down in their homes, listening in terror as gunfire erupted
and stories of mayhem came pouring in by cellphone. The gunmen were
breaking into homes and killing people, their neighbors.
"They stopped people and checked IDs," Sheikhly said. "The Sunnis got
executed and the Shiites were set free."
The
panicked calls started coming in to Youssef, the councilman, after 9
a.m. He tried to call police, even dialing 130, the equivalent of 911,
but no one responded, he said. He lamented that he could only tell his
constituents: "Be careful and stay in your houses."
"Where
were the Iraqi forces?" Youssef said. "Where was the [U.S. military]?
Their helicopters are always flying all over this region."
U.S.
forces say helicopters were dispatched to the scene at 10:50 a.m., with
ground forces arriving 20 minutes later. By then, Shammari and other
witnesses said bitterly, the worst of the massacres were over.
A U.S. military spokesman defended the American response.
"Right
now, coalition forces have about 8,000 troops operating within the
entire Baghdad area," which has a population of 5 million, Army Maj.
Gen. William B. Caldwell IV told reporters a day after the incident.
"We are not across the entire Baghdad city. We are at key locations
worked out in agreement with the Iraqi security forces. We responded
when asked by our counterparts."
Shammari, a longtime resident
considered a paternal figure in the neighborhood, said he called the
U.S.-led forces, the Iraqi army and the Iraqi police, to no avail.
He
also called his contact in the chain of command of the Shiite militia
called the Badr Brigade, which is linked to one of the most powerful
Shiite political parties in Iraq. The contact told Shammari that he had
no influence over the people responsible for what was happening in the
neighborhood.
"He said they had no authority over the gunmen
that were fighting us and they will not obey our word," Shammari
recalled, his voice brimming with quiet rage.
Panicked residents
began calling local television stations, especially the Sunni-run
Baghdad TV. They described how gunmen backed by police officials
systematically went from house to house. Many alleged that the gunmen
were loyalists of Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr, whose Al Mahdi militia
has been accused of attacking Sunnis. Shiite militiamen have also been
accused of infiltrating the security forces, using police vehicles and
weaponry to carry out sectarian vendettas.
In a live interview
broadcast on Al Arabiya TV, Harith Dhari, the head of the Muslim
Scholars Assn., a Sunni group, alleged that police commandos
"participated in and supported the attacks of the militia."
By 3 p.m., police reported that the U.S. Army and Iraqi soldiers and
police had entered the area and imposed a curfew.
When
the uniformed men arrived at Shammari's house in the early afternoon of
July 9, they said they wanted to search for weapons. He showed them his
AK-47, allowed under Iraqi law. They then asked to take away his elder
son, Mostafa. He resisted, meekly.
"They said they wanted to ask him a few questions and bring him home
tomorrow," Shammari said.
Many fear Mostafa now lies somewhere in a ditch with a bullet hole to
his head.
"My son is at the mercy of God," Shammari said.
That
night, gunmen began shooting at his house. He kept the lights off, and
family members stayed awake all night praying they would make it until
morning. As dawn broke, Shammari put his wife, three daughters and
other son into his car and tried to make a break for it. A police
officer at a checkpoint, surrounded by young armed men, ordered him to
return to his home.
Instead, he left his car with his
neighbors and began to look for another escape route. He and his family
walked 1 1/2 miles through a back road beyond the neighborhood, meeting
neighbors along the way who told them of disasters that had been
befallen longtime friends over the past day: kidnappings, killings and
house raids.
Finally, the family scurried into a passing taxi.
Shammari took his family to relatives, dropping his daughters off at
one cousin's place and his wife at another's, and taking himself and
his 19-year-old son to a third's.
Four days after the attack,
around 4 a.m., Shammari received a panicked call from his neighbor.
Shammari's house was on fire, he was told. He and the neighbor called
the fire department, Shammari said, but the police refused to let the
firetrucks through.
When he returned to the smoldering remains
of his home the next day, he found that his Korans and paintings with
religious verses had been carefully placed in plastic bags and laid out
on the front yard. The generator gas tank that was normally in the
courtyard was in his living room, as if someone had doused the place
with gasoline and dumped the container. His old manuscripts, history
books, photo albums, hand-woven rugs — possessions accumulated over 20
years of family life and hard work — were all burned.
He still
hasn't worked up the strength to tell his wife about the house, he
said. But it doesn't matter: They're never going back to Jihad.
Times staff writers Zainab Hussein and Shamil Aziz
contributed to this report.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times