Mass pilgrimage adds to pressure on beleaguered Maliki
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
The Iraqi government is struggling to overcome opposition at home and abroad
as more than one million Shia pilgrims brave sniper fire to converge on the
holy city of Kerbala for a religious festival.
The immense pilgrimage is, in effect, a show of strength by the 16 million
Shia, some 60 per cent of the Iraqi population, which may turn out to be
more important in the long run than the manoeuvres of the political parties
in Baghdad.
The government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is under intense pressure
from Sunni and Shia parties as well as from the US. Late on Sunday five
leading politicians announced an accord on the release of detainees, the
distribution of oil revenue and measures to allow former members of the
Baath party to work for the government.
The US has been demanding that the Iraqi government meet a set of benchmarks
which would indicate progress towards reconciliation between the Sunni, Shia
and Kurdish communities. But it is unlikely that the new accords will be
approved by parliament or, even if they were, can ever be implemented. A
former Baathist returning to a Shia-run ministry runs the risk of being shot
out of hand.
The government has deployed heavy security and introduced a partial curfew
in Baghdad to prevent bomb attacks on pilgrims. In the past Sunni
extremists, notably al-Qa'ida in Iraq, have launched deadly attacks on Shia
pilgrims marching to their holy shrines, causing massive casualties.
Despite the security measures a sniper killed a pilgrim on Jadriyah bridge
over the Tigris in the centre of Baghdad and gunmen hiding in an orchard
south of the capital opened fire on another group, killing one and wounding
three others.
The marchers are easy to identify. They carry bright green, red, yellow and
pink banners and chant in unison slogans such as "We are the Shia" and "We
are the sons of Imam Hussein, and the name of Ali is always on our tongues."
The present Shabaniyah festival, which reaches its high point in Kerbala
tonight, marks the birth of Mohammed al-Mahdi, the 12th and last Shia imam
who disappeared in the ninth century and is expected to return as the
redeemer.
These giant pilgrimages are part of the Shia religious tradition but also a
display of their political might. Ever since the Shia triumphed in the two
parliamentary elections of 2005 they have been nervous of the US taking
power away from them as America is frightened of the growing power of Iran,
the one great Shia power.
The Iraqi government of Mr Maliki is an alliance between Shia religious
parties and Kurdish nationalist parties. It does not want to give up real
power to the Sunni who dominated Iraq for centuries up to the fall of Saddam
Hussein in 2003.
Mr Maliki has responded robustly to criticism from Senator Hillary Clinton
who demanded that he be replaced because he cannot forge national unity. He
said she and other Democrats should "come to their senses" and stop treating
Iraq like "one of their villages". He also extracted an apology from the
French Foreign Minister, Bernard Kouchner, who had been quoted as saying
that Mr Maliki had to be replaced.
It is unlikely that any replacement of Mr Maliki would do much better. The
authority of the government is limited on the ground and control of security
is largely in the hands of the US military. The government is also seen,
with reason, as corrupt, incompetent and out of touch. Any new prime
minister would have to reflect the demands of their Shia and Kurdish
electorate.
The death of another four US soldiers was announced yesterday. And the
American use of massive firepower in civilian areas continues to anger
Iraqis. According to the US military, they won a small victory when 30
insurgents attacked an American outpost near Samarra on Sunday leading to
gun battles and the destruction of a house by a US jet. A US statement said
12 insurgents were killed and 14 captured. But Iraqi police and hospital
officials put the number of dead at eight whom they identified as Mohammed
Abdul-Wahab, his mother, wife and five of his young children.