Wednesday, April 25, 2007

RE: Work on Baghdad wall continues despite premier's opposition

----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: The Man Common
Date: Apr 25, 2007 9:05 AM


Work on Baghdad wall continues despite premier's opposition

dpa German Press Agency

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Baghdad- The construction of a three-mile wall around a
Sunni neighbourhood in Baghdad continued Monday, the military
spokesman for the Iraqi government said, despite Premier Nuri al-
Maliki's opposition to the plan.
Qassem Atta confirmed the US military's plan to form a 3.5-metre-
high concrete wall to enclose Adhamiya district, where tit-for-tat
sectarian violence is threatening to spiral out of control.

He also insisted that Iraqi citizens had requested that walls be
erected between neighbourhoods for security considerations, and so
the work on the Adhamiya wall will continue, he told Iraqiya state
television.

Atta also said that the defence minister had a "firm opinion"
about the walls, namely that they were "temporary."

Atta's statements came only a day after al-Maliki had openly
called for the halt of the separation wall, saying he opposed it.

Anger was sparked among citizens and some politicians in Baghdad
after local and international news sources circulated the report of
the wall that is expected to divide notorious neighbourhoods - and in
turn Baghdad itself.

Atta had told the press that building such and similar walls
across Baghdad was part of a security plan enacted on February 14 in
an effort to quell ongoing violence in the city.

The planned walls are expected to reduce the traffic of armed
militants between neighbourhoods. Each wall would have two access
points only.

The Adhamiya wall's construction had already begun on April 10.

According to Britain's The Guardian, which blew the whistle on
the construction last Saturday, US paratroopers from Camp Taji, some
30 kilometres to the north of Baghdad, transported "stacks of huge
(6,300-kilogram) concrete barriers" in trucks into the capital.

"Cranes, protected by tanks, winched them into place. Building has
continued every night since," the newspaper report read.

And according to Atta, similar constructions are to follow and are
expected to appear in areas like Rasafa and Karakh.

Sunnis are increasingly concentrating to the west of the Tigris in
Baghdad, while Shiites flee to the east.

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