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Iraqi police force facing reshuffle
BAGHDAD—Under pressure to take stronger action against sectarian
violence, the ministry in charge of Iraq's police force will change top
commanders and has already fired some 3,000 employees accused of
corruption or rights abuses, a spokesman said Saturday.
The Shiite-led police force is widely accused of being infiltrated by
Shiite militias blamed in slayings of Sunni Arabs, and critics say Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki has been reluctant to move against the militias
since many are linked to parties in his coalition.
Thousands have died this year in the cycle of killings between Shiites
and Sunnis death squads. At least 14 other people were killed Saturday,
mostly in sectarian violence around the country.
Also, the bodies of 17 Shiite construction workers were found in an
orchard outside Baghdad, kidnapped and decapitated in apparent
retaliation for an attack on Sunni Arabs last week.
The workers' headless bodies were found Friday outside the city of
Duluiyah, 45 miles north of Baghdad, along with four other unknown
victims, also beheaded.
The killings of the workers were apparently retaliation for the
kidnapping on Wednesday of three Sunni Arabs in Duluiyah by a Shiite
militia, police said. The three were killed and their bodies burned.
When the current government was formed in May, Interior Minister Jawad
Bolani was brought to his post — in charge of police forces — in large
part because he had no militia links. But his lack of militia
connections has also given him less leverage to make change.
Spokesman Abdul-Karim Khalaf said the ministry intended to carry out a
shake up to ensure stronger action to stop the violence.
"We are working on reshuffling the ministry's vital posts like (the
leaders of the) police commandos and public order forces, as well as
some undersecretaries," he told The Associated Press, without
elaborating.
He said most of the 3,000 employees who had been removed since May were
suspected of corruption or human rights violations, but did not specify
whether they were involved in militia activities. Up to 600 of them will
face prosecution, he said.
Earlier this month, an entire brigade of some 700 policemen were
suspended from service and taken to barracks because of suspected
militia sympathies. The commander of one of the brigade's battalions
faces criminal prosecution.
The troops were suspected of allowing Shiite militias to carry out a
mass kidnapping of some two dozen people from a frozen food factory in
Baghdad. At least seven of those kidnap victims have since been found
dead.
Still, Khalaf played down the role of the ministry's police forces in
militia violence, blaming instead the Facilities Protection Service,
rather than the police. The FPS, created to guard government buildings
and infrastructure, has some 150,000 members but an unclear command
structure.
The FPS "is part of the problem in the death squad activities. They are
not working under the supervision of either the Interior of the Defense
Ministry but under the ministries that use them," Khalaf said. U.S.
commanders have also said FPS members may be carrying out a large
portion of the killings.
Authorities are investigating the assassination on Friday of Col. Salam
al-Maamouri, a commander of the elite Scorpions police battalion, which
was tasked with going after both Sunni insurgents and Shiite militias.
Al-Maamouri, a Shiite, was killed along with an aide in his office in
the southern city of Hillah when a bomb exploded. Initial reports said
the bomb was hidden beneath his desk, though Capt. Muthana Khlaid Ali, a
spokesman for the provincial police force, said Saturday it may have
been set in the office window from the outside.
Al-Maamouri was believed to have received threats from Shiite militias
in the area because he was taking action against them. The militias were
demanding his forces stay out of areas under their control and pressing
him to release jailed fighters, one aide of the colonel told The
Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity out of fear of
reprisals.
The Interior Ministry's Khalaf said the assassination appeared to have
had help from "elements inside his office."
Al-Maamouri, 35, and other former army offices established the Scorpion
battalion in July 2003 and later it was incorporated into the police.
"He was a tough man who paid no regard to ethnic background and didn't
operate along sectarian lines," said Hussein Abdul-Sada, a member of
Hillah's provincial council.
In Saturday's bloodiest attack, seven people were killed in an early
morning mortar attack on a small Sunni village near Baqouba, 35 miles
northeast of Baghdad. Residents blamed Shiite militias.
Residents said the attack came after the Iraqi army had raided the
village and another nearby. "After that, the militia attacked," a
middle-aged man told AP Television News at a Baqouba hospital where he
was seeking injured relatives.—Agencies
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