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IRAQ WARS
Bullet-riddled corpses echo brutal Iraqi sectarian war
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 19, 2013


Iranian exile leader appeals for UN help
Geneva (AFP) Sept 19, 2013 - An Iranian opposition leader urged the United Nations Thursday to help free seven Iranians she said were being held in Iraq after a massacre at a camp for exiles killed 52.

The seven Iranian exiles, members of the People's Mujahedeen Organisation of Iran (PMOI), disappeared after a September 1 attack in Camp Ashraf, northeast of Baghdad, that left 52 people dead.

The PMOI charges that special Iraqi security forces that answer to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki were behind the slaughter. Iraqi authorities blame infighting within the PMOI for the deaths.

The group's leader Maryam Radjavi says the seven survivors are in Iraqi custody, and risk being sent back to Iran where they could face torture of forced disappearance.

"I call on the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, to take the necessary urgent measures to save these hostages. A first step would be a call for their liberation," Radjavi, head of the People's Mujahedeen of Iran, told a conference at the UN in Geneva.

She pointed out that the seven were asylum seekers who have a right to protection under the Geneva Convention.

The UN and Western governments have condemned the Camp Ashraf attack, but have been careful not to assign blame.

Pillay has demanded an "independent, thorough and transparent" probe of the mass-killing.

The 42 other survivors of the mass killing were transferred last week to Camp Liberty, a former US military base on the outskirts of Baghdad where some 3,000 other members of the group are housed.

Radjavi, also voiced concern for the Camp Liberty residents, pointing out that 112 PMOI members had been killed in 17 different attacks since US troops withdrew from Iraq at the end of 2011.

The PMOI was founded in the 1960s to oppose the shah of Iran and later the country's clerical rulers, and set up camp in Iraq during Saddam Hussein's war with Iran in the 1980s.

It was disarmed after the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, and today's Shia-majority and Tehran-friendly government in Baghdad is eager to see it move elsewhere.

For years, the UN has been searching for countries willing to host the exiles.

The bullet-riddled bodies of 10 young men were found in Baghdad on Thursday, in a bleak reminder of Iraq's brutal Sunni-Shiite sectarian conflict that almost tore the country apart.

And a series of attacks the same day killed 17 more people, the latest in a surge in violence that Iraqi authorities have so far failed to stem.

Security and morgue officials said the unidentified men -- aged 17 to 25 -- had been shot in the head and chest. They had been dead for up to two days, an army source said.

The corpses were recovered close to a disused pharmaceuticals plant at Mahamel near the capital's eastern Shiite district of Sadr City.

Summary executions were commonplace at the height of the Sunni-Shiite conflict in 2006-2007, when many thousands died.

This was the first time in several years that such a large number of bodies had been found in one place.

The executions added to violence that has cost more than 4,200 lives this year, the highest toll since 2008, when Iraq was emerging from its brutal sectarian war.

The upsurge has raised fears of civil war.

Militants, including those linked to Al-Qaeda, have struck mosques, marketplaces and even football fields, and also carried out brazen assaults on two major prisons.

On Thursday, at least eight people were killed and 25 wounded by a bomb in a market in Abu Ghraib, west of Baghdad, officials said.

And other attacks, including six bombs that exploded near shops in an area south of Tikrit, killed nine more people, among them four soldiers.

The UN deputy special representative for Iraq, Gyorgy Busztin, has expressed "extreme concern" about a sectarian-based displacement of Sunni communities.

"The use of violence and intimidation against communities by illegal armed groups forcing them to flee their homes is unacceptable," he said on Wednesday.

Busztin called on the authorities "to protect communities from attack, ensuring their safety, security, and right to a peaceful life free of intimidation."

Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who heads Iraq's Shiite-majority government, condemned the trend as he met with displaced Sunni families.

He said Al-Saadun clan members had been driven out of Nasiriyah, Basra and Kut, all Shiite-majority regions in the south of the country.

A Western diplomat said "ethnic cleansing is taking place each day. There are more and more attacks aimed at widening the rift" between Iraqi communities."

In the port city of Basra, gunmen have shot dead 15 Sunnis since the start of the month, including a cleric and mosque employees, according to Abdulkarim al-Khazraji, a representative of the local Sunni community.

"Messages have been left in envelopes at night near Sunni mosques telling Sunnis to leave Basra" or face revenge attacks for violence against Shiites in the northern city of Mosul.

"An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth," the messages warn, according to Khazraji, a religious leader.

He said some families had fled, despite assurances of protection by the authorities, and all prayer services in Sunni mosques have been suspended.

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IRAQ WARS
10 bullet-riddled bodies found in Baghdad: officials
Baghdad (AFP) Sept 19, 2013
The bodies of 10 young men shot in the head or chest were found on Thursday near a disused factory in the Iraqi capital, security and morgue official said. The men, whose corpses were recovered close to the former pharmaceuticals plant at Mahamel near the Shiite Sadr City district, were aged between 17 and 25 and had been dead for up to two days, an army source said. Summary executions w ... read more


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