Clashes continue in Iraq while PM asks for gunmen’s surrender

By Xinhua

Baghdad : Clashes between Shiite militia and security troops remain hot across Iraq on Wednesday, while Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki issued a 72-hour ultimatum for gunmen to surrender weapon.


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The escalation of battle generated concern that a ceasefire offered by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr could end and large-scale violence resurrect.

In Basra, the focus of the confrontation, the death toll has reached 38 while more than 134 others were injured, a local security personnel said on condition of anonymity.

Maliki, who has been in Basra to oversee a major offensive by Iraqi security forces, dubbed “Operation Cavalry Assault”, ordered a three-day deadline for militants to hand over weapons or face consequences.

“Those who were deceived into rising weapons must hand over their arms and make a written pledge not to repeat their actions within 72 hours, otherwise they will face penalties according to the law,” Maliki said.

The prime minister has said the government has resolved to restore security and law in the oil-rich city, which has seen fierce turf wars between Shiite factions and rampant criminal activities.

The British troops stationed outside the city have reportedly offered air surveillance, while stayed away from ground operations.

In Baghdad, Sadr’s Mahdi Army militiamen battled U.S.-backed Iraqi forces in their sprawling Shiite bastion of Sadr City neighborhood on the east of the capital.

Up to 20 people were killed and 115 others were wounded during clashes which started after midnight and continued sporadically during the day.

In the afternoon, fierce clashes erupted between the Mahdi Army and Iraqi security forces in two other neighborhoods.

In addition, barrages of mortar and rocket shellings rocked different areas of the city, including the heavily fortified Green Zone, killing at least 10 people and wounding dozens, including three Americans.

In the city of Amara, capital of Maysan province southwest of Baghdad, gunmen attacked an Iraqi Army patrol, killing five soldiers and burning eight military vehicles.

Sadr has called on his followers to stage a nation-wide civil disobedience in protest of the pursuing effort by the government. He threatened to take further actions if the attacks on his people continue.

His ceasefire since last August contributed to the security improvement.

The U.S. military welcomes his move, but says some of his followers have not followed his order. It also accuses Iran of funding, arming and training the breakaways.

Maj. General Kevin J. Bergner, a U.S. military spokesman, said Wednesday that the operations are designed to tackle criminals rather than the Mahdi Army.

“The actions are not against (the Mahdi Army). It is the government of Iraq taking responsibility and acting to deal with criminals on the streets,” the spokesman told reporters.

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