From the Los Angeles Times
Iraqi militia leader's death shatters
truce
The Mahdi Army commander was hated by Shiites
and Sunnis alike. Nonetheless, his assassination reignites sectarian
killings.
By Ned Parker
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 23, 2007
BAGHDAD —
-- Mahdi Army commander Hamoudi Naji and his men paraded past the
grocery stores, car repair shops and brick homes in the Ugaidat
neighborhood, the one section of Washash not under his control. It was
a reminder to everyone watching that even if he couldn't touch this one
area, the entire district belonged to him.
It
had been five months since the Shiite militia leader had hammered out
the truce with Abu Yasser, a senior member of the Sunni clan that
Ugaidat was named after. The tribe had been able to fend him off, and
Naji, a vegetable seller and car thief with a love of violence, had
finally agreed to leave the Ugaidat clan alone.
On Thursday
night, Naji watched Sunni and Shiite men sipping tea by their front
gates and children playing games for Ramadan, the Muslim holy month
that has just begun. Up the street, Abu Yasser spotted him.
Abu
Yasser remembered when the two men announced the truce and celebrated
with a meal in a tent in the middle of the district. The terms were: no
killing, no displacement and a return to calm. He had hoped it would
spread through all Washash, but it did not.
Naji continued to
walk. From the date palms, gunmen watched him and opened fire. The
Mahdi Army leader collapsed, mortally wounded, and with him went the
truce that had prevailed in the neighborhood.
"His men thought
that the fire came from us. They started shooting," Abu Yasser said.
"We were astonished and ran to our houses and brought our weapons to
defend ourselves."
Sectarian war had descended once more on
Washash. The irony was that it had exploded over a man who was hated by
Shiites and Sunnis alike.
Within the hour, small gangs from
the Mahdi Army hunted down Sunnis across the district. Anywhere from
five to 20 people were killed, and by Friday afternoon, at least 30
Sunni families had fled Washash.
Violence continued Saturday as a Sunni man was pulled out of a car and
shot to death.
Naji, a man viewed by many as a criminal, had ignited another chapter
in Iraq's civil war.
Communal
resentments were so entrenched that once blood was spilled, many Sunnis
decided they were better off leaving the district despite assurances
from the U.S. military that it was increasing its patrols and adding
Iraqi troops. Sunnis accused the Badr Organization, another Shiite
militia, of assassinating Naji, and Shiites pointed the finger at Abu
Yasser's tribe.
In Baghdad's war, the fighting often has less to
do with communal differences than with the ruthlessness of men such as
Naji, who drape themselves in the banner of a party to rule the
streets.
According to interviews with Washash residents, Naji
had climbed his way from being a vegetable seller to a commander in the
Mahdi Army. When he joined the militia, he had a gang of 20 to 25 men;
they had dabbled in kidnapping and car theft.
His gang even
included some Sunnis. When he was gunned down, Naji counted at least
three Sunnis in his gang. He made room for anyone who pledged loyalty
to him and was willing to follow his commands. Through the militia, he
evicted Sunni families from their homes so he could rent them and make
some extra cash. He charged shop owners a monthly protection fee, they
paid him for extra generators, and he continued to carry out
kidnappings.
A Mahdi militiaman Saturday applauded his death.
"We are much better off with Naji dead," the fighter said. "We feel
safer. Hamoudi Naji did so many bad things."
Such sentiments
mattered little for those such as Abu Yasser, who no longer felt
comfortable in Washash, where he has lived for more than 50 years. On
Friday, he spoke to the U.S. military and then Iraqi army officers
about whether he should flee his home.
Abu Yasser said one
Iraqi officer told him: "What are you still doing in the middle of this
Shiite area? Why haven't you left already? You are bringing us all
troubles."
He agreed and joined a caravan of cars escorted by
the Iraqi army. "We left our houses. We only took the important small
things and some clothes," he said. "I don't think we will ever go back
to our houses, especially after what happened."
The U.S.
military commander for Washash, Lt. Col. Ed Chesney, watched as the
Sunnis started to flee, despite the promises of an increased military
presence. "They are making a decision based on their experiences over
the past few years," he said.
Some of Abu Yasser's relatives left their homes with Shiite friends who
promised to look after them.
"My neighbor, who is a Shiite, is not content with what the Mahdi Army
is doing in Washash," said a displaced man, Sabah Ali. "I wish I could
go back home, and I know somehow that I will. One day it will get
better and I'll return."
Still, speaking by phone from his new
home in west Baghdad, Ali marveled at the brutality of the last few
days and those Shiites in the neighborhood who fought them.
"Their hearts have no mercy anymore," he said. "A sniper killed a woman
in the street who was carrying her baby. A shot in the head -- what
kind of human being would do that?"
But in death, Naji's faults
were forgotten for some militia members, who rallied to his memory.
They praised him for his truce in Ugaidat and recounted his betrayal in
a Sunni neighborhood. "He was a great man and from the good elements of
the Mahdi Army," said a fighter in west Baghdad.
In other
violence Saturday, a tribal leader from the Anbar Awakening Council, a
Sunni group, said more than 25 suspects related to the organization Al
Qaeda in Iraq had been detained in connection with the killing this
month of Sheik Abdul Sattar Rishawi, who had led the western province
of Anbar in revolt against Sunni extremists. The police in the
provincial capital, Ramadi, reported that the chief of Rishawi's
security detail had been detained.
Also Saturday, Iraqi
President Jalal Talabani demanded that the United States release an
Iranian official, arrested in an early morning raid in the northern
Iraqi region of Kurdistan last week, whom the U.S. military accused of
transporting explosives and training terrorists on behalf of Iran's
Revolutionary Guard.
"We express our resentment over this
arrest without coordination with the local government," Talabani, who
is Kurdish, said in a letter to U.S. Army Gen. David H. Petraeus and
U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker.
U.S. soldiers raided a hotel
Thursday in Sulaymaniya, a city in northern Iraq, and arrested Aghawi
Farhadi, who was visiting Iraq as part of an official trade delegation.
Separately,
seven Iraqis were killed during a U.S.-led raid in Musayyib, south of
Baghdad, Iraqi security officials and the U.S. military confirmed.
In
other developments, the Islamic State of Iraq, an umbrella organization
of extremist groups that includes Al Qaeda in Iraq, released a video in
which five Iraqi soldiers, identified as having been captured in Diyala
province, are executed after pleading for their colleagues to desert
the army and police.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times