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IRAQ WARS
Two Sunni mosques bombed, muezzin killed in Iraq
By Abbas al-Ani
Hilla, Iraq (AFP) Jan 4, 2016


Iraq PM vows to hunt down mosque bombers
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 4, 2016 - Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said the security forces were tracking down the perpetrators of attacks against Sunni religious targets south of Baghdad on Monday.

Unknown attackers bombed two mosques in the Hilla region and shot dead a muezzin near Iskandariyah, a mixed area south of the capital which was badly affected by the civil war that raged in the country a decade ago.

"We ordered Babil operations command to hunt down the criminal gangs of Daesh and their likes who targeted mosques to sow sedition and undermine national unity," Abadi said on Twitter.

Daesh is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group which Iraqi security forces are battling on several fronts.

There was no claim of responsibility for the attacks, which came against a tense regional backdrop following the execution by Saudi Arabia of prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr.

Baghdad accuses Saudi Arabia of actively supporting IS, which still controls swathes of the country, with funds and weapons.

Blasts rocked two Sunni mosques in central Iraq Monday, amid fears of renewed sectarian strife following Saudi Arabia's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric, police and medics said.

As thousands demonstrated against the Gulf monarchy in Baghdad, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi vowed to track down the attackers, whom he said were attempting to undermine national unity.

After Saudi Arabia severed ties with Iran over the firebombing of its embassy and was followed by Bahrain and Sudan, the protesters demanded Baghdad break off relations with Riyadh.

A man was killed in one of the overnight attacks and a muezzin -- the person appointed to recite the Muslim call to prayer -- was gunned down in the same region south of Baghdad.

In Hilla, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) from the capital, a police captain said the Ammar bin Yasser mosque in Bakerli neighbourhood was bombed after midnight.

"After we heard the explosion, we went to its source and found that IEDs (improvised explosive devices) had been planted in the mosque," he said.

"Residents said a group of people with military uniforms carried out this operation," he added.

A witness said he saw gunmen shoot dead a young man displaced from his home town of Ramadi who had been living in the mosque with his family.

"The armed men killed one of the displaced who lives in the mosque" with his wife and two children, the resident said on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals.

A Hilla doctor confirmed the death.

Ramadi is a Sunni city where Iraqi federal forces reclaimed the upper hand a week ago after months of battling the Islamic State group.

The Al-Fateh mosque in a village called Sinjar, just outside Hilla, was also destroyed overnight.

A police captain said three or four men in military uniforms were involved in that bombing.

"They took advantage of the cold weather, there was nobody outside," he said.

A medical source in Hilla said three people were wounded in the explosions.

- Muezzin murdered -

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts, nor for the killing near the town of Iskandariyah, about 40 kilometres south of Baghdad.

A muezzin from a Sunni mosque in Iskandariyah, a town about 40 kilometres (25 miles) south of Baghdad, was also shot dead overnight, several sources said.

A local councillor identified the slain muezzin of the Mohammed Abdallah Jabbouri mosque in Haswa as Taha al-Juburi.

"He was ambushed by unknown gunmen near his house," a source in Iskandariyah police said.

A doctor also confirmed his death.

Iskandariyah is part of a mixed Sunni-Shiite area south of Baghdad which was once dubbed "the triangle of death" and was badly affected by sectarian violence last decade.

Pushing back IS in this region after the jihadists took over large parts of the country in 2014 was one of the priorities of the government and allied Shiite militias.

That was achieved in a few months and IS has been largely eradicated from the area but violence -- of a sectarian nature and crime-driven -- has remained frequent.

The weekend execution in Saudi Arabia of prominent Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr sparked outrage in Iraq.

Shiite politicians and clerics unanimously condemned the execution but several religious figures in the Sunni minority also denounced it.

"We ordered Babil operations command to hunt down the criminal gangs of Daesh (IS) and their likes who targeted mosques to sow sedition and undermine national unity," Abadi said on Twitter.

Thousands of supporters of prominent Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr demonstrated near the foreign ministry Monday, demanding all ties with Saudi Arabia be broken off.

The protesters threatened to storm the so-called "Green Zone" where the newly reopened Saudi embassy is located but they were held back by organisers and riot police.

Iran has accused Saudi Arabia of using Nimr's execution to stoke sectarian tensions in the region.

Tehran has warned the Gulf monarchy it would pay a "high price" for the execution, which was one of 47 carried out on Saturday.

The Saudi embassy in Tehran was firebombed by an angry mob, prompting Riyadh to respond by announcing it was breaking off diplomatic relations with Iran.


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