(Reuters) - Iraqi
Shi'ite militiamen machine gunned minority Sunni Muslims in a village
mosque on Friday, killing dozens just as Baghdad was trying to build a
cross-community government to fight Sunni militants whose rise has
alarmed Western powers. A morgue official in
Diyala province north of Baghdad said 68 people had been killed in the
sectarian attack staged on the Muslim day of prayer. Ambulances took the
bodies 60 km (40 miles) to the provincial capital of Baquba, where
Iranian-trained Shi'ite militias are powerful and act with impunity. Attacks
on mosques are acutely sensitive and have in the past unleashed a
deadly series of revenge killings and counter attacks in Iraq, where
violence has returned to the levels of 2006-2007, the peak of a
sectarian civil war. Two
influential Sunni politicians, Deputy Prime Minister Saleh al-Mutlaq and
Parliament Speaker Salim al-Jibouri, quickly suspended participation
in talks with the main Shi'ite political alliance to form a new
government. Lawmaker
Nahida al-Dayani, who is from Diyala, said about 150 worshippers were at
Imam Wais mosque when the militiamen arrived following a roadside
bombing which had targeted a security vehicle. "It is a new massacre,"
said Dayani, a Sunni originally from the village where the attack
happened. "Sectarian
militias entered and opened fire at worshippers. Most mosques have no
security," she told Reuters. "Some of the victims were from one family.
Some women who rushed to see the fate of their relatives at the mosque
were killed." The
bloodbath marks a setback for Prime Minister-designate Haider al-Abadi,
from the majority Shi'ite community, who is seeking support from Sunnis
and ethnic Kurds to take on the Islamic State insurgency threatening to
tear Iraq apart. An army
major who declined to be identified said the gunmen arrived in two
pickup trucks after two bombs had gone off at the house of a Shi’ite
militia leader, killing three of his men. A
Sunni tribal leader, Salman al-Jibouri, said his community was prepared
to respond in kind. "Sunni tribes have been alerted to avenge the
killings," he said. MOSUL STONING In
the northern city of Mosul, Islamic State, which this week released a
video showing the beheading of American journalist James Foley, stoned a
man to death after one of its self-appointed courts sentenced him for
adultery, witnesses said. The
parents of Foley, who was kidnapped while covering the Syrian civil
war, called on Friday for support to free other foreigners still held by
Islamic State fighters. "We
do pray, we beg the international community to help the remaining
hostages," Diane Foley said on MSNBC television. "We just pray that they
will be set free," she said after a long conversation with Pope
Francis, who the Vatican said called the couple on Thursday afternoon to
offer his condolences. Abadi, Iraq's prime minister-designate, condemned Foley's killing on his Facebook page and said Iraq would lead the fight against Islamic State with the help of Washington and other allies. "The
barbaric murder of journalist James Foley demonstrates to the world the
lethal mindset and impending threat of ISIS & why they must be
eradicated," he wrote. The
U.N. Security Council also condemned Foley's killing, saying Islamic
State militants and their ideology of intolerance must be defeated. The
stoning, which happened on Thursday, was the first known instance of
the punishment by Islamic State militants in Iraq since it seized large
areas of the country in a June offensive. Having poured in from Syria across a desert border that it does not recognize, the movement has declared its own caliphate. Similar stonings by the radical Sunni group have been previously reported in Syria,
where it split from al Qaeda. Islamic State is the most powerful rebel
group fighting President Bashar al-Assad's forces in a civil war which
the United Nations said has claimed almost 200,000 lives at the very least. U.S. President Barack Obama's
decision to authorize air strikes in Iraq for the first time since
American troops pulled out in 2011 has helped to slow the militants'
offensive. However,
America's top soldier acknowledged that the internationally recognized
frontier between Iraq and Syria, over which the militants have free
passage, no longer meant much in the wider conflict. General
Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, suggested
Islamic State would remain a danger until it could no longer count on
safe havens in Syria. The
White House said on Friday the United States stood ready to take further
action against Islamic State fighters and reiterated that it would not
be restricted by the Iraq-Syria border. Deputy national security adviser
Ben Rhodes said the group is more dangerous today than it was six
months ago. In an article
in the Washington Post on Friday, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said the
advances made by the forces of the Iraqi government and Kurdish
fighters against Islamic State showed that "when its fighting strength
is eroded, it can be routed by local forces without U.S. boots on the
ground." He said it was
critical for Iraqis to set aside their differences and form a
government. "We are also encouraging Iraq’s neighbors to refrain from
fueling sectarian divisions," which only plays into Islamic State's
hands, Biden said. He did not single out any of the neighbors, which
include Shi'ite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia. SYRIAN DEATH TOLL DOUBLES Obama
came close to ordering air strikes on Syria last year, but they would
have been against Assad's forces which are fighting Islamic State in the
complex war involving a range of factions battling each other. At
least 191,369 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict up to
April, more than double the figure documented a year ago and probably
still an underestimate, the United Nations human rights office said on Friday. Obama
had intended to punish Assad for using chemical weapons in the civil
war - charges Damascus denied - but the air strikes were canceled after a
Russian-brokered deal under which Syria surrendered its chemical
arsenal. Sources
familiar with Syrian government thinking say Assad is wagering that
Islamic State's push to reshape the Middle East will eventually force a
hostile West to deal with him as the only way to tackle the threat. Western
governments which back the uprising have dismissed the idea of
rapprochement. But if the United States were to attack Islamic State in
Syria, it would find itself - however reluctantly - fighting a common
enemy with Assad. British
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said dialogue with Assad would not
advance the Western cause. "We may very well find that on some occasions
we are fighting the same people as he is but that doesn't make us his
ally and ... it wouldn't be practical, sensible or helpful to even think
about going down that route," Hammond told BBC Radio. His
Dutch counterpart Frans Timmermans said the fight against Islamic State
could be successful only if it was confronted in Syria as well as Iraq.
Iraq also faces hard
decisions. The government has promised to release from prison a former
defense minister of ousted president Saddam Hussein, a senior Sunni
official said. In an
interview with the London-based Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, Deputy Prime
Minister Mutlaq did not say why the promises to free Sultan Hashem and
other Sunni military and political leaders had been made. Hashem's release could appease the Sunnis who dominated Iraq until a U.S.-led invasion overthrew Saddam in 2003. But
it would mark a major concession by the government led by Shi'ites and
probably upset the Kurdish community. Hashem was sentenced to death for a
campaign under Saddam that included gassing Kurds in the town of
Halabja in 1988. The
conflict may also mean other old enemies working together, albeit with
hard bargains being struck. This includes regional Shi'ite power Iran, which has long been at odds with the United States over its nuclear program. Foreign
Minister Javad Zarif was quoted on Thursday by the state news agency
IRNA as saying Tehran was ready to help tackle Islamic State in Iraq,
but first wanted progress in negotiations with world powers over the
nuclear program. However,
perhaps reflecting the sensitivity of the issue, IRNA later reported
foreign ministry spokeswoman Marzieh Afkham as dismissing "reports by
some news agencies about Iran and U.S. cooperation in Iraq". France,
one of the six nations in nuclear talks with Tehran, said this week it
wanted Arab states, Iran and the five permanent members of the U.N.
Security Council to coordinate a comprehensive response against Islamic
State. The West fears the program aims to develop a nuclear weapons capability, while Iran insists it is peaceful.
Shi'ite militia kill dozens of Iraqi Sunnis in mosque shooting
Zaman Alwasl
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