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IRAQ WARS
Cockfighting in Iraq: a different kind of battle
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) April 11, 2012

Two Iraq electoral commission officials arrested
Baghdad (AFP) April 12, 2012 - The head of Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) and one of its members were arrested on Thursday, Judge Qassem al-Abboudi, who is also a member of the panel, said.

IHEC chief Faraj al-Haidari was arrested along with Karim al-Tamimi for paying a bonus of 150,000 dinars ($130) to an employee of the commission, Abboudi told AFP.

Karima al-Assadi, a spokeswoman for IHEC, said only that "an investigation of the integrity committee (Iraq's anti-corruption watchdog) was underway within the electoral commission."

There is bad blood between Haidari, a 64-year-old Shiite Kurd, and Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri a-Maliki's State of Law list over his refusal to carry out a national recount after 2010 parliamentary polls, in which the premier's list came in second to rival Iyad Allawi's Iraqiya list.

Haidari only recounted the votes in Baghdad province.

The State of Law list sought a no-confidence vote on Haidari on July 30, 2011, for alleged corruption, but failed because other parties opposed the move.


Iraq is no stranger to battles, but this is not one fought with rifles and rockets: when the bell sounds, trainers release cocks Daqduqa and Sammam into the ring.

The crowd, scattered across the makeshift stands in a dank Baghdad house, erupts into cheers, baying for blood.

Welcome to cockfighting in Iraq.

The matches, illegal in Iraq but still widespread, consistently see dozens of men attend, some of whom come to gamble, though many come just for the entertainment.

"I have been coming here for five years, at least once a month," said Ahmed Jabbar, alluding to the fact that even through the capital's brutal violence in 2007 and 2008, he was a regular.

"I never put down money, I just watch -- this is my favourite sport, more than football or anything on television," said the 43-year-old plumber.

In the small house with a metal roof in west Baghdad, organisers hold cockfights most days from 5:00 pm to 11:00 pm, though matches are held in the morning on Fridays, the Muslim day of prayer.

There are no matches from June through October, though, because of Baghdad's boiling temperatures.

The "arena", comprised of a circular ring around three metres (10 feet) in diameter, is covered in red carpet and surrounded by tiered seating.

A large poster hanging on one of the walls outlines the rules: each fight consists of eight rounds of 13 minutes, with two-minute breaks between rounds, totaling nearly two hours.

A rooster is considered to have lost if it concedes three consecutive rounds, with a win being tallied if one cock holds the other's neck to the ground for a full minute.

Each bird's owner can forfeit a match by pulling his cockerel out if he fears for its life.

And with the competitive juices flowing, the stakes can be high.

In a country where the World Bank puts annual income per capita at $2,340, and unemployment at 17.5 percent, a rooster can cost as much as $8,000 and hundreds of dollars change hands in daily betting, even though gambling is considered un-Islamic.

-- 'Cockfighting brings people together' --

The most-prized birds are described as Harati, meaning they are of Turkish or Indian origin, and feature muscular legs and necks, with their owners and breeders dedicated to their training and diet, feeding them meat, eggs and vegetable peelings.

"Cockfighting brings people together across all regions and social classes," 42-year-old Safa Abu Hassan said.

"Whether they are officers, businessmen, civil servants, there is an atmosphere of enthusiasm here that is comparable to any sporting event," he added, noting that though he has been watching cockfights for more than 20 years, he only rarely puts down a wager.

He recalled one cockfight in 1993, "the most enthusiastic I have ever seen, between two roosters belonging to senior government officials in Baghdad."

"The total bets added up to around $1,500."

On this particular day, Daqduqa and Sammam competed tirelessly in the ring, jumping in the air and creating a flurry of feathers as the crowd roared relentlessly in the background before the bell rang for the scheduled two-minute break.

Their breeders took them back, poured water on the roosters' wounds, gave them a drink, and massaged their legs.

A bookie solicited bets from newly-arrived spectators, with wagers ranging from $3 to $100.

Ali Salim, Sammam's owner, sat in a corner, chain-smoking cigarettes as he watched the fight while his rival was perched on the opposite side of the ring, hitting his thigh whenever Daqduqa suffered a major blow.

Eventually, Daqduqa collapsed for a third consecutive round and Sammam was declared the winner.

The crowd burst into applause, and those who had lost money on the match joked: "Maybe that rooster took Viagra?"

Through it all, little notice is given to animal rights or concerns over cruelty towards the birds.

"The greatest rooster I had was one called Qardash, who won seven matches in a row in 2009," said Mahmud, a breeder for more than 20 years who currently owns 17 rosters.

"But the cocks do eventually die, and of course this saddens me," he added. "But ultimately, this is a sport."

"In every sport, there is a winner, and there is a loser."

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Six killed in Iraq attacks
Baghdad (AFP) April 12, 2012 - Gunmen ambushed a police patrol in northern Iraq on Thursday, killing two policemen and three civilians, while a bomb in central Iraq killed an eight-year-old girl, security officials said.

Gunmen ambushed the police patrol about 40 kilometres (24 miles) south of the northern city of Kirkuk, killing two policemen and three civilians and wounding three policemen and three civilians, police Brigadier General Sarhad Qader said.

They fired Kalashnikov assault rifles and PK machineguns from three cars, Qader said, adding that they battled police for about 30 minutes before managing to flee.

The Al-Qaeda and Ansar al-Sunna militant groups are active in the area, Qader said.

Ethnically divided and oil-rich Kirkuk province lies at the centre of a tract of territory Kurdish leaders want to incorporate into their autonomous region despite the opposition of many of the province's Arab and Turkmen residents, and of Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

In Diwaniyah in central Iraq, attackers threw dynamite at a religious institution linked to the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, a Shiite political movement, "killing an eight-year-old girl," the head of the provincial council's security committee, Karim Zaghir, told AFP.

"The explosion damaged the building," Zaghir said. "Security forces surrounded the location of the incident and prevented anyone from getting near it."

Violence in Iraq has fallen sharply from a peak of 2006 and 2007, but attacks still continue across the country. In March 112 Iraqis were killed in violence.



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