Ocnus.Net
Basra's Gun Rule Risks Iraq Future
By Paul Wood, BBC 26/3/08
Mar 26, 2008 - 12:53:58 PM
The story is
related by Patrick Cockburn, biographer of the radical Shia cleric, Moqtada
Sadr, whose Mehdi Army militia is the main target of the big security operation
in Basra.
Cockburn
says, quite correctly, that a lot of the coalition's success in reducing violence
in Iraq in recent months has to do with a ceasefire by the Mehdi Army.
There are
now worrying signs that action against the militia in Basra and arrest raids in
Baghdad are jeopardising the ceasefire.
The Iraqi
government felt it had to act in Basra because much of the country's oil
exports flow out through there as well as being the route in for many of Iraq's
imported goods.
Choked
by corruption
That
economic lifeline is being choked by corruption and by the violence which
accompanies it as rival criminal and political militias fight over the spoils.
One
militia, which has links to the Basra governor, controls the port. Other
factions, but chiefly the Mehdi Army, regularly skirmish with them.
Everyday
life, too, is dominated by the rule of the gun in Basra.
Some 100
women have been murdered by religious extremists over the past year for wearing
make-up or Western style dress.
Local
people associate most attacks like these with members of the Mehdi Army. The
police are little help as they are heavily infiltrated by the militants.
The fact
that the police are so compromised in Basra is one reason why thousands of
Iraqi army troops have been sent down from Baghdad to take part in the
operation.
Tuesday's
fighting in Basra can be seen as the government trying to impose law and order
- but also as part of the power struggle within the Shia community.
Moqtada
Sadr believes his hundreds of thousands of followers, many of them armed, will
eventually deliver power into his hands.
Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri Maliki and his allies are determined to stop him.
In Basra,
the British troops are staying out of this fight, saying the Iraqi army is
demonstrating it is capable of acting on its own.
Further
north in Baghdad, the Americans tend to act in support of the local security
forces.
In reply,
the Mehdi Army has promised to step up attacks on the "occupation
forces".
The
Americans are congratulating themselves at the moment on the success of the
surge in averting a Sunni-Shia civil war - and over the thousands of former
Sunni insurgents who have changed sides to help the coalition fight al-Qaeda.
But the lesson of Tuesday's events is that intra-Shia
violence could be just as dangerous to hopes of peace as sectarian hatreds or
the insurgency.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008