Iraqi Shiites stage rally for Hezbollah
BAGHDAD, Iraq – Thousands of Shiite youths, some armed, headed into Iraq’s capital Thursday for a pro-Hezbollah rally as skirmishes erupted with U.S. troops that left at least three people dead, officials said. Fifteen rally-goers were wounded in a bus bombing.
The city was rocked before the crowd arrivals by a motorcycle bomb that killed 12 people – the latest victims of bloodshed that senior U.S. generals warned could lead to civil war.
Two Marines were killed in Anbar province west of Baghdad, the U.S. military said, bringing to 13 the number of Americans to die in that violent region since July 27.
Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr summoned his followers around the country to attend a mass rally Friday in the city’s Sadr City district in support of the Shiite militants of Hezbollah battling Israeli troops in southern Lebanon.
Iraqi government television said the Defense Ministry had approved the demonstration, a sign of the public anger over Israel’s offensive in Lebanon and of al-Sadr’s stature as a major player in Iraqi politics.
Some incidents were reported before the demonstrators reached Baghdad.
Iraqi police said one al-Sadr follower was killed by U.S. troops near Mahmoudiya after he brandished a weapon. American officials said two people were killed when gunmen in three vehicles shot at the guard towers of a U.S. base near the city and U.S. soldiers fired back.
At least 15 al-Sadr loyalists were injured when bombs exploded near a bus carrying them through southern Baghdad en route to Sadr City from southern Iraq, police Capt. Firas Geti said.
About 20 buses filled with al-Sadr followers drove to Baghdad from Basra, the country’s second-largest city. Most of the passengers were draped in the white shrouds that Muslims use to wrap their dead – a symbol of their willingness to die for Lebanon.
Today’s rally was intended to focus on events in Lebanon rather than Iraq, where sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shiites has risen alarmingly. But the presence of so many young Shiite militants – most of them from al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia – added a dangerous new element to an already volatile city.
In the latest violence, a bomb strapped to a motorcycle exploded Thursday in the center of Baghdad, killing at least 12 people and wounding 29, police said. The blast went off near fruit and vegetable vendors in a major shopping district, police Lt. Ahmed Mohammed Ali said.
At least 18 other people were killed or found dead Thursday across Iraq, including nine bodies discovered floating in the Tigris River – some of them bound and with bullet wounds. They also included three people killed late Thursday when extremists fired three mortar shells in the town of Obeidi near the Syrian border, the U.S. military said.
The Sadr City rally is aimed at mustering support for the Lebanese guerrillas and against Israel – and by extension against the United States for failing to force an end to the fighting.
Also Thursday, assault charges were filed against three Marines stemming from an incident April 10 in the Iraqi village of Hamdania, military officials said.
The alleged assault was uncovered during an investigation that previously led to allegations that seven other Marines and a Navy corpsman murdered an Iraqi civilian April 26.
The three charged in the April 10 assault were identified as Lance Cpl. Saul H. Lopezromo, Pfc. Derek I. Lewis, and Lance Cpl. Henry D. Lever. The nature of the assault was not described.