From the Los Angeles Times
Sadr loyalists warn of end to cease-fire
By Tina Susman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
8:31 AM PDT, April 1, 2008
BAGHDAD -- Loyalists of Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr today accused
government forces of breaching a cease-fire with continued raids in the
southern city of Basra and threatened a "return to conflict."
The warning came just a day after Basra and Baghdad felt the full
effect of the cease-fire, which Sadr called late Sunday following five
days of clashes between Shiite militiamen and Iraqi and U.S. forces.
The call to his Mahdi Army fighters to put down their weapons brought
relative calm to both cities, where curfews were lifted and rocket,
mortar and other attacks dropped.
Basra remained tense, though, and a statement released today by the
Sadr Movement office there said neighborhoods known as Sadr strongholds
continued to be "subjected to an aggressive campaign of raids,
detentions and destruction." It said Iraqi security forces and their
supporters, a reference to U.S. and British troops, had destroyed four
houses in Jubeila, in central Basra, and detained "tens of families."
There was no confirmation of the allegations. Neither the U.S. nor
British military immediately reported involvement in any operations in
Basra today, though their forces have taken part in earlier fighting
there.
Whether the Sadr accusations were true or not, their airing showed the
animosity that remained between Sadr and the Iraqi government, and it
underscored the tenuous state of the truce.
The fighting that began in Basra last Tuesday and spread to other
Shiite strongholds killed 605 people, Iraqi officials said Monday. That
sent the country's war-related death toll for March to its highest
level in several months, according to statistics released Monday night
by Iraq's Interior Ministry.
Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has said the offensive was aimed at
criminal elements, not at the Mahdi Army, which is a rival to the
government-backed Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, or SIIC. The two
movements and their militias are vying for power across Shiite southern
Iraq, and Basra, with its port and oil, is the biggest prize up for
grabs when local elections take place this fall.
Sadr has said Maliki is trying to cripple him in advance of those
elections to ensure SIIC controls Basra. Maliki has denied the
accusation.
In Basra today, residents clearly were fearful of venturing too far
from home, even though the Mahdi Army fighters who had ruled the
streets for days had withdrawn. Schools and city offices were closed,
and there was little vehicle or pedestrian movement. Fewer stores were
open today than Monday, a reflection of people's distrust in the
situation.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times