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Prominent Sadr aide arrested in Baghdad
19 Jan 2007 07:45:05 GMT
Source: Reuters

BAGHDAD, Jan 19 (Reuters) - Iraqi and U.S. forces seized a prominent follower of Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in Baghdad on Friday, a Sadr aide said, and the U.S. military described the man arrested as a senior death squad leader.

In a statement, the military did not name the man but said he was linked to Abu Deraa, a high-profile fugitive leader who is accused of running death squads and who claims loyalty to the Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

An official in Sadr's political office, however, said the man detained was Abdul-Hadi al-Darraji, a prominent media spokesman for the movement. "He was arrested at midnight (2100 GMT) with two cousins," Abdul-Mehdi al-Matiri told Reuters.

Matiri said a guard was shot dead during the arrest and that he believed the two others detained had since been released.

The U.S. statement made no mention of any violence and U.S. officials had no immediate comment. Though the statement did not identify Darraji, details of the operation given by the U.S. military coincided with those given by Sadr's office.

Senior Shi'ite officials close to Prime Minister Nuri al- Maliki's government say U.S. and Iraqi forces are mounting a campaign to seize leaders in the movement in an effort to quell sectarian violence that is pushing Iraq toward civil war.

A senior figure in the movement was shot dead by a U.S. soldier during a raid the Shi'ite holy city of Najaf last month.

The U.S. military said: "In an Iraqi-led operation, special Iraqi army forces captured a high-level, illegal armed group leader during operations with Coalition advisers."

It said he was suspected of leading "punishment" activities -- an apparent reference to informal courts meting out rough justice according strict interpretations of Islamic law. These included "kidnapping, torture and murder".

Matiri said: "We are angry. This is a kind of revenge. Sheikh Darraji deals with the media. He is not a military man."

He said the U.S. forces were trying to provoke the movement into a violent response but added: "We will not retaliate."

Maliki, a Shi'ite Islamist, partly owes his position to support from Sadr's political movement and has been criticised by Washington for failing to disarm the Mehdi Army.

As he and U.S. commanders prepare to deploy Iraqi and American reinforcements in a major security crackdown in Baghdad, Maliki has promised to quell Shi'ite militias as well as Sunni insurgents. He said this week that some 400 Mehdi Army members had been arrested in recent days in southern Iraq.

Sadr himself, a populist young preacher with a mass following, has publicly distanced himself from violence blamed on his Mehdi Army supporters, whom the United States has called the biggest threat to the security of Iraq.

Fellow Shi'ite leaders say they are negotiating to keep Sadr and his political movement inside the main Shi'ite bloc while at the same time they hope to disarm his militia followers.
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Children stand in the compound of a relative's residence, at which they are now staying after their families left their homes in Baghdad for Arbil, about 350 km (220 miles) north of Baghdad, January 19, 2007. Tens of thousands of people have fled Baghdad, the epicentre of violence in Iraq. The United Nations, launching an appeal for aid for Iraqis who have fled their homes or left the country, said this month about one in eight Iraqis is now displaced. Many, including non-Kurds, have taken refuge in Kurdistan -- a largely autonomous region in the northern mountains that has been a haven from attacks plaguing other areas since the U.S. invasion of 2003. Picture taken January 19, 2007. To match feature MIGRATION-IRAQ/ARBIL.