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Anti-US protests flare in Baghdad
Tens of thousands of demonstrators in Baghdad protested against the United States presence in Iraq on Friday, following Friday prayers. Waving banners in English and Arabic reading “Leave our country, we want peace,” protestors outside of the Abu Hanifa Al-Numan Mosque chanted “No to America, no to Saddam” and “This homeland is for the Shia and Sunni,” in a sign of unity among the two groups.
Muslims poured out of mosques and into the streets after the first Friday prayers in a US-controlled Baghdad, calling for an Islamic state to be established.
Carrying Korans, prayer mats and banners, tens of thousands marched in the city's biggest protest since US forces toppled Saddam Hussein over a week ago - a protest unthinkable under the former president. "Leave our country, we want peace," read one banner aimed at the Americans who seized control nine days ago but failed to check looting, power blackouts and chaos in the aftermath. "No Bush, No Saddam, Yes Yes to Islam," read another.
The organisers called themselves the Iraqi National United Movement and said they represented both Iraq's majority Shi'a Muslims and powerful Sunnis. Shia's, close to Iran's leaders, were marginalised under Saddam's Sunni-dominated government and some Iraqis have feared sectarian clashes could erupt.
The marchers came from several mosques and converged in a central district, Aadhamiya, for the peaceful protest. One of the biggest columns came from Abi Hanifah Nouman mosque. Its dome was bombed in the US-led war. The imam, Ahmed al-Kubaisi, said in his sermon that the US invaded Iraq to defend Israel, and also denied Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. "This is not the America we know, which respects international law, respects the right of people," he said.
Anti-US slogans
His followers poured out chanting anti-US slogans and waving banners that read "No to America. No to Secular State. Yes to Islamic State" and "We reject American hegemony". Saddam's Baath Party, which ruled for three decades, was secular.
Standing on and all around a tanker truck crawling down the road, the men, some in turbans and with long beards, chanted: "We are Sunni and Shi'ite brothers, we will not sell this nation." In Tehran, one influential conservative Shi'ite cleric also called for the US-led forces to leave. "Unite with each other and send America and Britain out of your country. It is a duty for the Iraqi nation," Ayatollah Mohammad Emami-Kashani said in a sermon broadcast live on radio.
The US has said a former US general will lead an interim government in Iraq for an indefinite period but insists it will hand over control as soon as possible. "People will have the right to demonstrate in a free Iraq," said Brigadier General Vincent Brooks, the US military spokesperson. "There may be some that say, 'Get the coalition out of here'." - Reuters
(Copyright ) 2003 SABC.
Carrying Korans, prayer mats and banners, tens of thousands marched in the city's biggest protest since US forces toppled Saddam Hussein over a week ago - a protest unthinkable under the former president. "Leave our country, we want peace," read one banner aimed at the Americans who seized control nine days ago but failed to check looting, power blackouts and chaos in the aftermath. "No Bush, No Saddam, Yes Yes to Islam," read another.
The organisers called themselves the Iraqi National United Movement and said they represented both Iraq's majority Shi'a Muslims and powerful Sunnis. Shia's, close to Iran's leaders, were marginalised under Saddam's Sunni-dominated government and some Iraqis have feared sectarian clashes could erupt.
The marchers came from several mosques and converged in a central district, Aadhamiya, for the peaceful protest. One of the biggest columns came from Abi Hanifah Nouman mosque. Its dome was bombed in the US-led war. The imam, Ahmed al-Kubaisi, said in his sermon that the US invaded Iraq to defend Israel, and also denied Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. "This is not the America we know, which respects international law, respects the right of people," he said.
Anti-US slogans
His followers poured out chanting anti-US slogans and waving banners that read "No to America. No to Secular State. Yes to Islamic State" and "We reject American hegemony". Saddam's Baath Party, which ruled for three decades, was secular.
Standing on and all around a tanker truck crawling down the road, the men, some in turbans and with long beards, chanted: "We are Sunni and Shi'ite brothers, we will not sell this nation." In Tehran, one influential conservative Shi'ite cleric also called for the US-led forces to leave. "Unite with each other and send America and Britain out of your country. It is a duty for the Iraqi nation," Ayatollah Mohammad Emami-Kashani said in a sermon broadcast live on radio.
The US has said a former US general will lead an interim government in Iraq for an indefinite period but insists it will hand over control as soon as possible. "People will have the right to demonstrate in a free Iraq," said Brigadier General Vincent Brooks, the US military spokesperson. "There may be some that say, 'Get the coalition out of here'." - Reuters
(Copyright ) 2003 SABC.
For more information:
http://www.sabcnews.com/world/the_middle_e...
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