Allawi: Iraq abuses as bad as under Saddam (AP) Updated: 2005-11-28 08:37 There was no comment from Shiite politicians on Allawi's interview. However,
the leader of Iraq's biggest Shiite party said allegations of torture were
distortions and might be designed to draw attention away from the Saddam's
trial, which resumes Monday after a five-week break.
"At the time of the Saddam trial, the issue of the torture in Iraqi detention
centers is being exaggerated," said Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. "When it comes to the crimes
committed by Saddam for decades in which millions of Iraqis were affected, there
is complete silence."
The remarks were broadcast Sunday by the party's television station.
In an interview published Sunday by The Washington Post, al-Hakim also
complained the U.S. government is tying Iraq's hands in fighting the insurgency
and said one of the country's biggest problems "is the mistaken or wrong
policies practiced by the Americans."
A man walks past defaced electoral posters of
former Iraqi prime minister Ayad Allawi reading, 'Allawi the man for this
stage, the man of the future. Iraqi National Iraqi list', referring to his
electoral list for the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections, in Baghdad, Iraq,
Monday, Nov. 21, 2005. [AP] | On Sunday, Iraqi police announced the arrest of eight Sunni Arabs charged
with plotting to kill the investigating judge who prepared the indictment that
led to Saddam's trial. Col. Anwar Qadir said the men were caught Saturday in the
northern city of Kirkuk carrying written instructions from a former top Saddam
deputy ordering them to kill judge Raed Juhi.
Military operations by Interior Ministry commandos against insurgents have
led to widespread claims of abuse from the Sunni community, which forms the
backbone of the insurgency. Sunni politicians say the ministry rounds up
hundreds of innocent civilians to search for a handful of rebels.
Interior Minister Bayn Jabr said Iraqi authorities had postponed a major
military operation against insurgents until after next month's elections
following a request from the head of the Arab League.
Jabr did not elaborate, but the league has been seeking to reduce tensions
between Iraq's Shiites and Sunnis and recently sponsored a conference in Cairo,
Egypt, attended by representatives of the country's major factions.
Before dawn Sunday, about 350 Iraqi soldiers in 50 vehicles carried out an
operation in a Sunni Arab area south of Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad.
A similar operation two weeks ago brought strong protests from Sunni leaders.
Iraqi army Maj. Karim Al-Zihayri said 15 people were arrested on suspicion of
planting roadside bombs, attacking checkpoints, kidnapping and stealing.
U.S. and Iraqi officials have warned of an increase in insurgent attacks
ahead of the elections, in which voters will choose the first fully
constitutional parliament since Saddam's regime was ousted in April 2003.
American authorities hope for a big Sunni Arab turnout, which could produce a
government that would win the trust of the Sunnis and lure them away from the
insurgency.
President Jalal Talabani said Sunday that some insurgent groups had contacted
his office about his call for talks, although he refused to identify them.
"We are receiving calls from groups who claim to be from the resistance and
they are expressing their support for meetings" with the government, Talabani
told reporters. "We want to convince every sincere Iraqi who is carrying arms to
come and participate in the political procss."
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