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IRAQ WARS
Famed Shiite clerics meet in wax in Iraq
by Staff Writers
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) May 11, 2012


US Republicans want answers in Iraq-Hezbollah case
Washington (AFP) May 10, 2012 - Senate Republicans demanded answers Thursday from the Justice Department and Pentagon for why a Hezbollah suspect accused in the death of five US soldiers was transferred to Iraqi custody before being charged with war crimes.

In a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee wanted assurances US officials would seek to keep Ali Musa Daqduq behind bars, even as an Iraqi court ruled the Hezbollah commander be released over lack of evidence.

"Now an Iraqi court has cleared Daqduq of any criminal charges under Iraqi law and, as we and many other observers had feared, may be set free without being held to account for his crimes against the United States and its soldiers," they wrote.

US lawmakers have long expressed interest in Daqduq, and his transfer to Iraq custody in December as US forces exited Iraq sparked a political furor in Washington.

Committee ranking Republican Chuck Grassley was incensed that while Congress was briefed on Daqduq's imminent release to Iraqi custody, "they never mentioned that the administration was considering (war crimes) charges, which were filed approximately two weeks later," he wrote in the letter, citing a report by The New York Times.

"Either the administration was purposefully withholding information from Congress or it had not done the due diligence required to file charges in a serious case against a dangerous terrorist," he added.

"If the administration was serious in pursuing Daqduq, officials had many years when they could have brought charges against him, yet the administration waited until he was not available to prosecute."

The Republicans demanded a copy of the military commission charge sheet against Daqduq, an explanation of why the Iraqi prosecution failed, and whether there were US efforts to have him transferred back to US custody or extradited to the United States.

They also demanded an explanation of why US briefers "failed to indicate that criminal charges were prepared but not presented to a military commission prior to turning Daqduq over to the Iraqi government."

US-led forces captured Daqduq in 2007. At the time, the United States accused Iranian special forces of using the Shiite militant group Hezbollah to train Iraqi extremists and of planning the 2007 attack.

Some of the most famed Shiite clerics of modern times have gathered together in a modest room under a religious school in Najaf in central Iraq -- as wax figures, waiting to be put on display.

The 20 likenesses depicting people who studied, lived or were born in Najaf, most of them clerics, are arrayed around the walls of the carpeted room, with fans protecting them from the heat.

Another statue is in a room upstairs, while 38 more are on order from an artist in Iran and are due to arrive in the coming weeks.

All be eventually be showcased in a special museum in Najaf that will also contain books and documents related to the personalities on display. But for now, they remain in storage.

Najaf is the main centre of Shiite religious scholarship in the world, and is a holy city for Shiite Muslims because Ali bin Abi Taleb, the first Shiite imam and the son-in-law and cousin of the Prophet Mohammed, is buried there.

The wax statues are detailed likenesses of the men's faces, hands and beards, with some even dressed in clothes that the personalities actually wore during their lifetimes.

One depicts Grand Ayatollah Abu al-Qassem al-Khoei, the top Shiite cleric in Iraq before his death in 1992, seated in a chair.

Khoei opposed the involvement of Shiite clerics in politics.

He was against Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's doctrine of velayat-e faqih or the "rule of the jurist," that saw clerics take power in Iran after the 1979 Islamic revolution that ousted the US-backed shah.

Another figure is of Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Baqr al-Sadr, who is posed sitting on the ground writing.

He was a staunch opponent of Saddam Hussein's regime and the founder of the Islamist Dawa party which Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki now leads, and he also backed the 1979 revolution in Iran.

Mohammed Baqr, who was executed along with his sister in 1980, opposed Khoei's "quietist" approach of avoiding political involvement.

Another likeness is of his cousin Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, who built the Sadr Movement which gave his son, cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, enormous influence following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq.

Mohammed Sadiq -- shown standing at a podium as though he were about to speak -- also ran afoul of Saddam and was killed along with two of his sons by gunmen in 1999.

-- Not just clerics: poets too ---

Not all of the statues are of clerics, however.

One is of famous Iraqi poet Ahmed Al-Safi, who was born in Najaf.

Another is of Abdelrazzaq Mohieddin, a professor originally from south Lebanon who was involved in establishing publishing houses in Najaf and developing educational institutions there.

Safi died in 1977, and Mohieddin in 1983.

"These statues were made in order to show appreciation and focus on the role of these notables and famous personalities," said Furqan Ali Merza, head of the project and an official in the religious school where the statues are housed.

"We selected 59 personalities from different religious, cultural and literary fields," he said, adding that the Hawza, the Shiite clerical community, received the largest share.

The project began in September 2011, he said, with an initial selection of 300 personalities, a number that was later trimmed to 150.

For budgetary reasons, however, that number was later reduced even further, eventually ending up at 59 statues.

The 550 million Iraqi dinars (about $458,000) in funding came from the budget of a problem-plagued project for Najaf to be the Islamic capital of culture, which was postponed earlier this year.

But the statues project is still going ahead.

Wax museums are not common in Iraq, and it is rare to find wax likenesses depicting Muslim religious figures anywhere in the world.

Making full statues of people is frowned upon in Sunni Islam, but Shiite Islam is more lenient about photography, paintings and depictions of respected personalities.

Sheikh Ali Merza, Furqan's father who is responsible for the religious school, said that the wax statues project faced "criticism at the beginning," but did not elaborate on what kind of opposition or from whom.

As a "first step, we checked the religious law and found no prohibition in implementing our project. Every new thing faces resistance, and the criticism of our project was spoken without awareness," he told AFP.

Sheikh Sadiq al-Hesnawi, deputy head of the cultural committee in the office of Moqtada al-Sadr, two of whose relatives are depicted, said that "the museum preserved some personalities who had influence in Najaf, and represents the interest of Iraqi society in those figures."

"We support these steps and praise them," he added. "We think it is like rewarding these figures."

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