Three killed in Kerbala clashes

Mon Aug 27, 2007 7:10pm EDT
 
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KERBALA, Iraq (Reuters) - Police killed three people in clashes with pilgrims in Iraq's city of Kerbala, where tens of thousands of Shi'ites have gathered for one of the holiest days on the Shi'ite calendar.

Police said they opened fire on a large crowd of pilgrims infuriated by strict security measures in force in the city for the celebrations, killing three and wounding 13. The shots were fired after the pilgrims began brawling with the policemen.

Sounds of gunfire echoed in the streets for about two hours on Monday night, a Reuters photographer said, but the fighting later ended.

And in Falluja, a town west of Baghdad, a suicide bomber killed 10 people when he blew himself up after evening prayers in a mosque on Monday, police and hospital sources said.

The surge in violence came as the United States was pushing for a political accord between Iraqi leaders to reduce sectarian violence that has killed tens of thousands of Iraqis.

Some 10,000 police officers and 5,000 Iraqi soldiers had been deployed in Kerbala ahead of a ceremony on Tuesday and Wednesday marking the 9th century birth of Muhammad al-Mahdi.

Shi'ites believe Mahdi, the last of 12 imams they revere as saints, never died and will return to save mankind.

Pilgrims from Baghdad and other Shi'ite towns have been converging on Kerbala, mostly on foot, in the past few days.

Shi'ite pilgrimages have been a target of Sunni bombers and have also served as rallying events for the Shi'ite majority, now running Iraq after decades under Saddam Hussein.

The pilgrimage had so far been largely peaceful. A pilgrim in Kerbala said however that tensions were running high, with scores of policemen on the main roads and others on rooftops.

ACCORD QUESTIONED

Earlier on Monday, a Sunni leader said that a new political accord between Iraq's main leaders would not be enough to lure minority Sunni Arabs back into the government.

Five political leaders announced the deal late on Sunday, agreeing measures to readmit former members of Saddam's Baath Party to public life and the release of many detainees.

"What happened yesterday is a good achievement in the current confused political situation. It is an achievement that deserves to be supported," Tareq al-Hashemi, the Sunni Arab vice president who signed the accord, told reporters.

Hashemi, of the Sunni Accordance Front, signed the deal along with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi'ite, and three other leading Shi'ite and Kurdish political leaders.

But he said the Front, which groups three parties, would not change its August 1 decision to quit the cabinet.  Continued...

 
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