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Muqtada al-Sadr extends Iraqi
cease-fire
Baghdad -
Anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada al-Sadr announced Friday that he has
extended a cease-fire order to his Shiite Mahdi Army by another six
months, giving Iraq a chance to continue its fragile recovery from
brutal sectarian violence.
His message was delivered by Shiite
clerics during prayer services in mosques dominated by followers of
the black-turbaned cleric.
"According to an order by Sayyid
Muqtada, activities of the Mahdi Army will be suspended ... for
another six month period," al-Sadr's aide Hazim al-Aaraji said,
using an honorific for al-Sadr during his sermon at the Kazimiyah
mosque in Baghdad.
Al-Sadr's decision to halt the
activities of his powerful militia for up to six months last August
was one of three critical steps widely credited with bringing the
Iraqi death toll down more than 60 percent in recent months.
The other pieces of the puzzle are
the so-called surge of U.S. troops and the move by U.S.-backed Sunni
fighters to switch allegiances and start working against al-Qaida in
Iraq.
The U.S. military welcomed initial
word of the decision, but pledged to continue cracking down on what
it calls breakaway factions that persist in violence.
"This extension of his August 2007
pledge of honor to halt attacks is an important commitment that can
broadly contribute to further improvements in security for all Iraqi
citizens," the military said in a statement. "It will also foster a
better opportunity for national reconciliation and allow the
coalition and Iraqi security forces to focus more intensively on al-Qaida
terrorists."
"Those who continue to honor al-Sayyid
Muqtada al-Sadr's pledge will be treated with respect and
restraint," it said. "Coalition and Iraqi security forces will
continue to work closely with the Iraqi people to protect them from
these criminals who violate the law and dishonor the commitment made
by al-Sayyid Muqtada."
The military also said it was open
to dialogue with the Sadrists and "all groups who seek to bring
about reconciliation in building the new Iraq."
The American military has continued
to raid Shiite groups it says are supported and trained by Iran and
have splintered off from al-Sadr's militia. That's angered some
followers of al-Sadr, who also are frustrated with the Iraqi
government, and they had argued for an end to the cease-fire.
According to an Associated Press
count, at least 609 Iraqi civilians and security forces died in Iraq
last month, compared to 1,920 killed in January 2007.
Al-Sadr issued his order to his
fighters to stand down on Aug. 29, days after deadly clashes in the
holy city of Karbala between his Mahdi Army and the rival Badr
militia of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic Council, the country's largest
Shiite party and a U.S. partner.
Involvement in fighting among
Shiites was chipping away at the young cleric's reputation as an
uncompromising nationalist leader seeking to restore Iraq's full
sovereignty and undermining his bid to become a national leader.
Aides at the time said the
cease-fire was designed to stop a Shiite-Shiite rift from spiraling
out of control and to weed out infiltrators in his militia's ranks.-- Associated
Press
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