(Reuters) - On
April 1, the city of Tikrit was liberated from the extremist group
Islamic State. The Shi'ite-led central government and allied militias,
after a month-long battle, had expelled the barbarous Sunni radicals. Then, some of the liberators took revenge. Near
the charred, bullet-scarred government headquarters, two federal
policemen flanked a suspected Islamic State fighter. Urged on by a
furious mob, the two officers took out knives and repeatedly stabbed the
man in the neck and slit his throat. The killing was witnessed by two
Reuters correspondents. The incident is now under investigation, interior ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan told Reuters. Since
its recapture two days ago, the Sunni city of Tikrit has been the scene
of violence and looting. In addition to the killing of the extremist
combatant, Reuters correspondents also saw a convoy of Shi'ite
paramilitary fighters – the government's partners in liberating the city
– drag a corpse through the streets behind their car. Local
officials said the mayhem continues. Two security officers, speaking on
condition of anonymity, said on Friday that dozens of homes had been
torched in the city. They added that they had witnessed the looting of
stores by Shi'ite militiamen. Later
Friday, Ahmed al-Kraim, head of the Salahuddin Provincial Council, told
Reuters that mobs had burned down "hundreds of houses" and looted shops
over the past two days. Government security forces, he said, were
afraid to confront the mobs. Kraim said he left the city late Friday
afternoon because the situation was spinning out of control. "Our city was burnt in front of our eyes. We can't control what is going on," Kraim said. Those reports could not be immediately confirmed. It wasn't supposed to be this way. Islamic State, an Al Qaeda offshoot that arose from the chaos in Iraq and Syria, slaughtered thousands and seized much of northern and central Iraq
last year. The government offensive was meant not only to dislodge the
group but also to transcend the fundamental divide in fractured Iraq: the enmity between the now-ruling Shi'ite majority and the country's formerly dominant Sunni minority. Officials
close to Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, a moderate Shi'ite, had
described the Tikrit campaign as a chance to demonstrate his
government's independence from one source of its power: Iraqi Shi'ite
militias backed by Shi'ite Iran and advised by Iranian military
officers. Sunnis deeply mistrust and fear these paramilitaries, accusing
them of summary executions and vandalism. But Abadi has had to rely on
the Shi'ite militias on the battlefield, as Iraq's regular military
deserted en masse last summer in the Islamic State onslaught. The
militia groups spearheaded the start of the Tikrit assault in early
March. But after two weeks of fighting, Abadi enforced a pause.
Asserting his power over the Shi'ite militias, he called in U.S.
airstrikes. Now, the looting and violence in Tikrit threaten to tarnish Abadi's victory. It risks signaling to Sunni Iraqis
that the central government is weak and not trustworthy enough to
recapture other territory held by Islamic State, including the much
larger city of Mosul. Tikrit, hometown of the late dictator Saddam
Hussein, is in the Sunni heartland of Iraq. At
stake is much more than future votes: Islamic State's rapid conquests
in 2014 were made possible by support from Sunni tribal forces and
ordinary citizens. They were convinced that the government – under
Abadi's predecessor, Nuri al-Maliki – viewed their community as
terrorists. If Sunnis dislike what they see in Tikrit, they may not back
the government's efforts against Islamic State. DEFENDING LIVES AND PROPERTY On
Friday, the government sought to assure all sides that it will enforce
order. Abadi issued a statement calling on the security forces to arrest
anyone breaking the law. Asked
to comment on the scenes witnessed by Reuters, his spokesman Rafid
Jaboori said he would not address individual incidents but said:
"People's lives and property are priorities, whether in this operation
or in the overall military effort to liberate the rest of Iraq." Sunni
lawmakers who visited Tikrit complained that events have spun out of
control since the security forces and militias retook the city. Parliamentarian
Mutashar al-Samarrai credited the government with orchestrating a
smooth entrance into Tikrit. But he said that some Shi'ite paramilitary
factions had exploited the situation. "I believe this happened on
purpose to disrupt the government's achievement in Tikrit," Samarrai
said. "This is a struggle between the (paramilitaries) and the
government for control." Neighborhoods
entered by the Iraqi forces and Shi'ite paramilitaries have been burnt,
including parts of neighboring Dour and Auja, the birthplace of Saddam
Hussein. Security forces
blame Islamic State for rigging houses with explosives, while Sunnis
suspect the Shi'ite militias and the army and police of deliberately
torching their homes. Looting
has also been a problem. Shi'ite paramilitary fighters in pickup trucks
raced through the city carrying goods that appeared to have been looted
from homes and government offices. The
vehicles were crammed with refrigerators, air conditioners, computer
printers, and furniture. A young militia fighter rode on a red bicycle,
gleefully shouting: "I always dreamed of having a bike like this as a
kid." Brigadier General
Maan, the main spokesman for the government forces, said police were
stopping vehicles that appeared to have stolen items. "We are doing our
best to impose the law." IRAN'S FINGERPRINTS Passions
were running high among the Shi'ite militia groups before the assault.
Islamic State beheaded people and carried out other atrocities in the
lands it conquered. In particular, the militias wanted revenge for
Islamic State's killing in June of hundreds of Iraqi soldiers captured
from Camp Speicher, a base near Tikrit. It was an event that came to
symbolize the Sunni jihadists' barbarism. Despite Baghdad's efforts to rein in the paramilitaries, the fingerprints of the Shi'ite militias – and of Iran itself – were all over the operation's final hours. On Wednesday, as Tikrit fell, militiamen were racing to stencil their names on houses in order to take credit for the victory. An
Iranian fighter, with a Kalashnikov rifle slung over his shoulder and a
picture of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pinned to his
chest, bragging about Tehran's role in the campaign. "I am proud to participate in the battle to liberate Tikrit," said the man, who called himself Sheik Dawood. "Iran and Iraq are one state now." On
the edge of Tikrit in the hours after the city's fall, a Shi'ite
paramilitary group drove in a convoy past several police cars. The
militiamen had strung the corpse of a suspected Islamic State fighter
from the back of a white Toyota pickup truck. The cable dragging the man
snapped, and the vehicle stopped. The
men got out to retie the bullet-riddled corpse. As they fastened the
cable tighter to the body, a song about their victory over Islamic State
played on the truck's stereo. Then they sped off, the corpse kicking up
a cloud of dust. The policemen standing nearby did nothing. On
Wednesday afternoon, Reuters saw two suspected Islamic State detainees –
identified as an Egyptian and a Sudanese national – in a room in a
government building. The Egyptian and the Sudanese were then taken
outside by police intelligence. Word
spread that the two suspected Islamic State prisoners were being
escorted out. Federal policemen, who had lost an officer named Colonel
Imad the previous day in a bombing, flocked around the detainees. The
interior ministry spokesman, Brigadier Maan, said the Egyptian had
stabbed an Iraqi police officer, which explains the anger against him.
Reuters couldn't verify that claim. "WE WANT TO AVENGE OUR COLONEL" The two prisoners were put in the back of a pickup truck. As the vehicle tried to leave, the crowd blocked it. The
federal policemen started shouting to the intelligence officers: Hand
over the men. The intelligence officers tried to shield the prisoners.
One pulled a sidearm as the federal police began swinging their fists. The mob was screaming: "We want to avenge our Lieutenant Colonel." Shi'ite
paramilitary men swarmed the area. The street filled with more than 20
federal police. Gunfire erupted. Bullets ricocheted. At least one of the
Shi'ite fighters was wounded, and began bleeding from the leg. The
pickup truck tried to back up. People in the mob grabbed one of the
prisoners from the truck, the Egyptian, and pulled him out. The
Egyptian sat silently at the feet of two big policemen in their
twenties. His eyes filled with fear. He was surrounded by a few dozen
people, a mix of federal police and Shi'ite militiamen. "He
is Daesh, and we should take revenge for Colonel Imad," the two federal
police officers yelled, using a derogatory Arabic term for Islamic
State. One of the
policemen held a black-handled knife with a four-to-five-inch blade. The
other gripped a folding knife, with a three-inch blade and a brown
handle. They waved their
knives in the air, to cheers from the crowd, and chanted: "We will
slaughter him. We will take revenge for Colonel Imad. We will slaughter
him." The policemen laid
the Egyptian's head over the curb. Then one of the police pushed the
other out of the way and he swung his whole body down, landing the knife
into the Egyptian's neck. The
cop lifted the knife and thrust the blade in the Egyptian's neck a
second time. Blood gushed out, staining the boots of the cheering
onlookers. The killer
started to saw through the neck, but it was slow-going. He lifted the
blade again and slammed it into the Egyptian's neck another four times.
Then he sawed back and forth. "BRING ME A CABLE" Their fellow policemen chanted: "We took revenge for Colonel Imad." The
killer lifted himself up the street pole next to the dying man so he
could address his comrades: "Colonel Imad was a brave man. Colonel Imad
didn't deserve to die at the hands of dirty Daesh. This is a message to
Colonel Imad's family don't be sad, raise your heads." Then he shouted: "Let's tie the body to the pole so everyone can see. Bring a cable. Bring a cable." His
friend with the folding knife kept trying to stab the Egyptian, with no
success. He cried out: "I need a sharp knife. I want to behead this
dirty Daesh." Finally the men found a cable, fastened it to the dead man's feet and dangled him from the pole. One
policeman grew upset at the spectacle and shouted: "There are dozens of
media here. This is not the suitable time. Why do you want to embarrass
us?" The mob ignored him
and continued trying to hoist the body. White bone stuck out from his
slashed neck, his head flopped from side to side, and the blood
continued to gush forth.
Special Report: After Iraqi forces take Tikrit, a wave of looting and lynching
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