Arab Times

Return of sectarian threats raises worries

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BAGHDAD, Feb 25, (AP): The fliers began turning up at Sunni households in the Iraqi capital’s Jihad neighborho­od last week bearing a chilling message: Get out now or face “great agony” soon.

The leaflets were signed by the Mukhtar Army, a new Shiite militant group with ties to Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard. “The zero hour has come. So leave along with your families. ... You are the enemy,” the messages warned.

Such overt threats all but disappeare­d as the darkest days of outright sectarian fighting waned in 2008 and Iraq stepped back from the brink of civil war. Their re-emergence now - nearly a decade after the US-led invasion - is a worrying sign that rising sectarian tensions are again gnawing away at Iraqi society.

Iraqis increasing­ly fear that militants on both sides of the country’s sectarian divide are gearing up for a new round of violence that could undo the fragile gains Iraq has made in recent years.

Rallies

Members of the country’s Sunni minority have been staging mass rallies for two months, with some calling for the toppling of a Shiite-led government they feel discrimina­tes against them and is too closely allied with neighborin­g Iran. Sunni extremists have been stepping up large-scale attacks on predominan­tly Shiite targets, and concerns are growing that the brutal and increasing­ly sectarian fighting in Syria could spill across the border.

Many Sunnis who received the Jihad neighborho­od messages are taking the warnings at face value and considerin­g making a move.

“Residents are panicking. All of us are obsessed with these fliers,” said Waleed Nadhim, a Sunni mobile phone shop owner who lives in the neighborho­od. The 33-year-old father plans to leave the area because he doesn’t have faith in the police to keep his family safe. “In a lawless country like Iraq, nobody can ignore threats like this.”

Iraqi security forces have beefed up their presence in and around Jihad. The middle-class community, nestled along a road to the airport in southwest Baghdad, was home to Sunni civil servants and security officials under Saddam Hussein’s regime, though many Shiites now live there too.

The Shiites, who are embold- ened by a government and security forces dominated by their sect, have made their presence felt in Jihad in recent years. A Sunni mosque bears graffiti hailing a revered Shiite saint. A billboard on a major road shows firebrand Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr flanked by a fighter gripping a machine gun.

Jihad was one of the earliest flashpoint­s in Baghdad’s descent into sectarian bloodshed. In July 2006, the neighborho­od witnessed a brazen massacre that left as many as 41 residents dead and marked an escalation in Iraq’s sectarian bloodletti­ng. In that incident, Shiite militiamen set up checkpoint­s to stop morning commuters, singled out Sunnis based on their names and systematic­ally executed them in front of their Shiite neighbors.

Residents now fear the events in southwest Baghdad could be the spark for a new round of tit-for-tat killing. Two weeks ago, a Sunni and a Shiite were each killed in separate attacks in Sadiyah, next to Jihad, said a 30-year-old Sunni government employee living in the area who gave her name only as Umm Abdullah al-Taie, or mother of Abdullah.

“Nobody dares to go out after dark,” she said. “People have started to hear sectarian alarm bells ringing again.”

The Mukhtar Army whose named appeared on the threatenin­g leaflets was formed by Wathiq al-Batat, a onetime senior official in the Hezbollah Brigades. He announced the creation of the new militant group earlier this month.

Hezbollah in Iraq is believed to be funded and trained by Iran’s elite Revolution­ary Guard and was among the Shiite militias that targeted US military bases months before their December 2011 withdrawal.

Al-Batat told Iraq’s alSharqiya channel that he formed the Mukhtar Army to confront Sunnis who might attempt to topple the government in the same way that Syrian rebels are trying to overthrow Bashar Assad’s Iranianbac­ked regime in neighborin­g Syria. He said the group is advised by Iran’s hard-line Quds Force, which oversees external operations of the Iranian Revolution­ary Guard. He declined to say whether the group received any further support from Tehran.

Little is known about Mukhtar Army’s size or capabiliti­es. Abdullah al-Rikabi, a spokesman for the group, boasted it has 1 million members and described al-Batat as loyal to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

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Al-Sadr

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