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Sadr City Grows Tired
of Crime
May 9, 2008 The
people of Sadr City are cooperating with Iraqi forces, but clearing the
crowded portion of Baghdad is a painstaking procedure, an Iraqi
government spokesman said in Baghdad.
U.S.
Army Spc. Joe Kunkel from 3rd Special Troops Battalion, 3rd Brigade
Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division provides security at Patrol Base
Comanche in the Sadr City District of Baghdad, Iraq, on April 19, 2008.
Tahseen al-Sheikhly
and Army Maj. Gen. Kevin Bergner, a coalition spokesman, discussed
ongoing operations in Sadr City during a news conference.
“We see some places in Baghdad like Sadr City, suffers from the control
of the criminal gangs and make those people suffer,” Sheikhly said
through a translator. “The Iraqi government exerted a lot of effort to
provide the needs for the people of Sadr City.”
Iraqi security forces and coalition soldiers are working together to
bring stability and security to Sadr City, a part of eastern Baghdad
with roughly 2.5 million people. The area is almost exclusively Shiite
Muslim.
In the current operations in the area, the Iraqi government is going
after illegal militias with medium to heavy weapons, indiscriminately
launching rockets or against Iraqi security forces and coalition
soldiers. The government considers these people criminals, officials in
Baghdad said, and is making a concerted effort to drive them out.
“These criminals are using the people of Sadr City as shields,” Sheikhly
said. “Government forces are trying to eliminate these gangs without
hurting the people.”
In the past few weeks, more than 700 rockets and mortars have been
launched into Baghdad neighborhoods. “Iraqi and coalition units are
responding appropriately to these teams that position themselves close
to public buildings and within residential neighborhoods and thereby
endanger innocent civilians,” Bergner said.
The Iraqi people are turning in these criminal gangs and their armories.
Iraqi police in Karbala received a tip that led to the discovery of a
cache with 20,000 items of ammunition and weapons that included
bomb-making materials, mortars, grenades and rifles.
Iraqi police in Sadr City found four rocket launching rails hidden in a
hospital. A 122 mm rocket hit a playground and wounded seven people,
Sheikhly said.
The people who live in Sadr City are growing impatient, the government
spokesman said.
“We care about the safety of the people,” Sheikhly said. “Our troops
would be able to crush and eliminate those gangs in a very fast way, but
we would like to avoid the human casualties. So we are being patient and
trying to be more patient in choosing the operations to deal with those
situations.”
The Iraqi government is concerned about neighbors shipping arms and
money to the criminal gangs. Recent talks between Iraq and Iran signal
the seriousness with which the Iraqi government regards the flow of
illegal arms, and the training and funding of extremists in Iraq,
Sheikhly said.
“The flow of weapons to extremists is a very serious problem in Iraq,”
he said. “We know … that these extremist groups could not do what they
are doing without the support they are receiving from other countries.”

Al-Qaida in Iraq still remains a problem in certain areas, Bergner said.
The group killed 31 and wounded 50 more Iraqis in two suicide-bomb
attacks in the past week, he noted.
“Al-Qaida in Iraq’s ruthless tactics of sending women to conduct these
suicide attacks is another example of the nature of the enemy, its
corrupt ideology, and the depths to which they are willing to sink,” he
said.
Iraqi and coalition forces are pursuing al-Qaida aggressively,
concentrating in areas around Mosul, the Diyala River Valley and other
areas, Bergner said.
“They are uncovering terrorist facilities, disrupting their lines of
communication, and capturing or killing their leaders,” he said.
Some 50 al-Qaida in Iraq leaders and facilitators have been detained,
mostly around Mosul, he added. |