Saturday, September 09, 2006

Violence averted at Iraq festival

Tens of thousands of Shia Muslim pilgrims have taken part in a religious festival in the Iraqi city of Karbala amid tight security.
Thousands of police and soldiers were deployed to guard sites and deter possible attackers. No major security incident was reported.

Up to three million pilgrims had been expected during events marking the birth of the Ninth Century Imam Mahdi.

Such festivals have been targeted by Sunni insurgents in the past.

While pilgrims have begun to leave Karbala, a major police presence will remain in place until noon on Sunday to make sure that people are able to leave the city safely.

This weekend is being seen as a real test of the new Iraqi security force's ability to deal with the continuing insurgency, the BBC's James Shaw in Baghdad says.

There have already been attacks on pilgrims travelling to Karbala in recent days.

Some 7,000 police, 2,000 Iraqi soldiers and 1,800 Interior Ministry commandos were deployed around Karbala, with units of special forces guarding the city's entrances, Iraqi officials said.

"Our forces have tightened their control on the ground and our only concern now is rockets launched from a far distance," Iraqi army Major General Samir Abdullah said earlier.

Many pilgrims made their way by foot or vehicle to Karbala, 80km (50 miles) south of Baghdad.

Three pilgrims were reported to have been killed and several wounded by a mortar attack on a procession near the town of Musayyib on Friday.

A week ago, 14 Pakistani and Indian pilgrims were ordered off their bus and shot at the roadside.

In other developments in Iraq:


The bodies of six people are found in Mahmoudiya, 30km (18 miles) south of Baghdad

A roadside bomb kills three people and wounds 14 on a highway south of Kirkuk

Several Iraqi policemen die in separate attacks on patrols in Baghdad

Gunmen fire on employees of the state-funded newspaper al-Sabah in Baghdad, reportedly killing one.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki will make his first official visit to Iran on Monday, a government spokesman says

BBC
One piece of good news. It's always good for people to have their parade in peace and security. I bet all them pilgrims sent a few dinars too.

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