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IRAQ WARS
Iraqi Sunnis flee Anbar turmoil for Shiite Karbala
by Staff Writers
Ain Tamr, Iraq (AFP) Jan 07, 2014


Iraq missile strikes kill 25 militants: ministry
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) Jan 07, 2014 - Iraqi missile strikes on the city of Ramadi killed 25 militants Tuesday, the defence ministry spokesman said.

Iraqi forces targeted militants with "missile strikes, resulting in the killing of 25," Staff Lieutenant General Mohammed al-Askari told AFP.

Parts of Ramadi and all of Fallujah were lost by government forces last week, the first time militants have exercised such open control in major cities since the height of the insurgency that followed the 2003 US-led invasion.

Security forces and tribesmen failed to retake south Ramadi from Al-Qaeda-linked militants in an overnight attack, police said.

Four civilians were killed and 14 wounded in the fighting, Dr Ahmed Abdul Salam of Ramadi hospital told AFP.

He had no figures for any casualties in the ranks of either the army or the militants.

Gunmen kill 12 at Baghdad brothel
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 07, 2014 - Gunmen killed seven women and five men at a brothel in the Iraqi capital on Tuesday, security and medical officials said.

The attack took place at an apartment in the Zayouna area of east Baghdad, where a similar attack took place last year.

On May 22, gunmen attacked a house in Zayouna that was used as a brothel, killing 12 people.

The week before, gunmen restrained police at a checkpoint in the area, and then shot dead 12 people at a row of adjoining alcohol shops nearby.

Violence in Iraq has reached a level not seen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian killings.

It took just five days for this month's death toll to surpass that for all of January last year.

Gunmen kill 7 police in attack on Iraq checkpoint
Tikrit, Iraq (AFP) Jan 07, 2014 - Gunmen attacked a police checkpoint north of the Iraqi capital on Tuesday, killing seven including a captain, a police officer and a doctor said.

The attack took place on the highway north of the city of Samarra, the sources said.

Iraqi security forces are often targeted by militant groups opposed to the government.

Violence in Iraq has reached a level not seen since 2008, when the country was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian killings.

It took just five days for this month's death toll to surpass that for all of January last year.

A steady stream of families fleeing fighting in Ramadi and Fallujah is arriving at a checkpoint in Iraq's Karbala province, seeking shelter from the deadly violence.

As militants hold parts of Ramadi and all of Fallujah, in Anbar province, Sunni families are now seeking safety in the Shiite-majority Karbala province, in a country that has been plagued by sharp sectarian divisions.

The checkpoint in the Ain Tamr district has the look of a border crossing, manned by police and soldiers supported by armoured vehicles.

Authorities have laid on the extra security to stop militants entering Karbala, where the Prophet Mohammed's grandson Hussein is buried, at one of the holiest sites in Shiite Islam.

One of the nearly 300 people to seek refuge in Ain Tamr is 38-year-old Hussein Aleiwi, who worked in a restaurant in Ramadi, 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Baghdad.

He has just arrived at the checkpoint with 22 other members of his family, mostly women and children, among them his wife and six of his sons.

"The only choice left was to flee for fear our children and wives would be killed in the continuous shooting and the mortar shelling in Ramadi," he says.

His voice shaking as he holds his daughter, Aleiwi says "the city is suffering from a lack of security, of fuel, of electricity, and most businesses are shut".

Fear and exhaustion show on the faces of his family as they wait for a truck to take them to the house of a relative in Ain Tamr.

Fighting broke out in Anbar after security forces demolished a major anti-government protest camp last week, and Al-Qaeda-linked militants seized control of Fallujah and parts of Ramadi after security forces left areas of both cities.

Dozens of people have been killed in Anbar violence, including clashes in Ramadi, as troops try to retake control of militant-held areas, and on the outskirts of Fallujah, parts of which have been shelled by the army.

It is the most serious unrest in years to hit the Sunni-majority province bordering war-torn Syria.

It is also the first time militants have exercised such open control in major cities since the height of the insurgency that followed the US-led invasion of 2003.

'Al-Qaeda snipers on roofs'

Shaalan Kadhim, a security forces member at the checkpoint, says that "for four days, families from Fallujah and Ramadi have been flocking to Ain Tamr".

"All of them complain of the tough circumstances and the suffering" in their home cities, he adds.

"There are Al-Qaeda snipers hiding on the roofs, and they are killing everyone, soldiers and civilians, without distinction."

Faleh Aidan, 55, an agriculture ministry employee who had fled Fallujah, says: "No schools and no government departments are working and shops have all closed."

The city's residents live in fear, he says, and "some of them have begun living in very simple houses here, but they feel like they are living in palaces".

Fallujah was the target of two major assaults in which US forces saw some of their heaviest fighting since the Vietnam War before American troops backed by tribal allies eventually wrested back control of Anbar from militants.

Raed al-Mashhadani, the local official responsible for Ain Tamr, told AFP that "since the first days of the crisis in Anbar province, we have taken measures to welcome the families fleeing" the fighting.

By Monday, more than 60 families had arrived in the district, mostly from Fallujah.

He says local authorities were working with the Iraqi Red Crescent and the International Organisation for Migration to provide families with aid, including fuel and food.

Mashhadani adds that some 400 Anbar families, mostly from Fallujah, came to Ain Tamr during the 2004 fighting.

Outside a public library in Ain Tamr, new arrivals gather to register and receive aid, watched over by representatives from humanitarian groups and local officials.

Abbas Razzaq, who arrived from Fallujah with his wife and four children four days ago, is relieved to be away from the fighting.

"We feel that we are among our people, our brothers," he says. "We are all family here -- there is no difference between Sunni and Shiite."

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