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Iraq on high alert ahead of Ashura ceremonies

Published: 04 Nov 2014 - 03:05 am | Last Updated: 19 Jan 2022 - 08:19 pm

BAGHDAD: Iraq boosted security yesterday amid fears of the Islamic State group launching major attacks on Shia pilgrims flocking to the shrine city of Karbala as further reports emerged of mass killings.
The pilgrims are prime targets for the IS jihadists, who have carried out a series of mass executions in recent days, killing scores of members of a tribe in Iraq’s western Anbar province.
The jihadists are reported to have slaughtered dozens of members of the Sunni Albu Nimr tribe, which took up arms against them in Anbar.
Yesterday, tribal leader Naim Al Kuoud Al Nimrawi said that IS “executed 36 people, including four women and three children” on Sunday alone.
Accounts have varied as to the number and timings of the executions, but sources have spoken of more than 200 people murdered in recent days.
A police officer and an official gave figures of more than 200 to 258 people killed, while Iraq’s human rights ministry put the toll at 322 and a tribal leader said 381 were executed.
The mass killings appear aimed at discouraging resistance from powerful local tribes in Anbar, where IS overran large areas in June as pro-government forces suffered a string of setbacks.
There are fears that Anbar province, stretching from Iraq’s borders with Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the western approach to Baghdad, could fall entirely.
Hundreds of thousands of pilgrims are expected in Karbala today for the peak of Ashura marking the death of Imam Hussein, one of Shia Islam’s most revered figures.
At least 19 people were killed in bomb blasts targeting Shias in Baghdad on Sunday claimed by IS, and security forces were on alert for further attacks.
Karbala deputy governor Jassem Al Fatlawi said “hundreds of thousands of Iraqi pilgrims” and 65,000 others from 20 different countries have thronged Karbala.
Pilgrims have been targeted during Ashura before, but this year they face even greater danger after the IS lightning offensive in June.
Like other Sunni extremists, IS considers Shias heretics.
Authorities have deployed thousands of security personnel and allied militiamen to protect the pilgrims, in a major test for the new government headed by Prime Minister Haidar Al Abadi.
“The security plan is fully in effect and the security forces are on a state of high alert,” an Iraqi police colonel said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Police were deployed throughout Shia districts of Baghdad and security forces are guarding the 100-kilometre route from the capital to Karbala.
More than 26,000 members of the security forces were deployed in Karbala itself, backed by helicopters providing air support and monitoring desert areas, army Staff Lieutenant General Othman Al Ghanimi told reporters.
Police used X-ray trucks to scan vehicles as sniffer dogs monitored arrivals and some 1,500 policewomen checked female pilgrims.
AFP